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a* ^ AVratAOB DAILT OmOCLATIOM for the Month of Beptember, 1818 6,286 Member ef the AaMI Boreaa ef Obmtottoaa VOL. LVIII, NO. 8 MANCHESTER — A CITY OF VILLAGE CHARM THE WEATHER Foreeeet M 0. 8. Weather Hartford Fair tonight; Taeaday fair with •lowly rtaing temperatore. (Uaoalftod Adverttolag on Fage Id) 0 . SUPREME TRIBUNAL REFUSES TO HEAR MOONEY’S APPEAL Justices Bbck And Reed Take Rarely-Dsed Step Of DeuotKg Dissent; Counsel Plans Further Action. UERBINO to o WEIGHTY; ^ — nSH PLANT COLLAPSES ' Waahlngton, OcL 10— (A P )—The Supreme court refused today to re- view Thomaa J. Ifooneya lateat ap- peal for releaae from San Quentin penitentiary. Mooney la aerving a life Mntence for complicity In the 1918 Prepared- neas day parade bombing In San Franctoco. JuBtlcea Black and Reed took the rarely-uaed step to denoting their dlasent to the court'e* order which apparenUy closed the door to eny hope that Mooney may obtain re- learn through court action—imiiw.. evidence ahould be discovered. ^ Lubec, Me.. Oct 10.— (A P )— A 200-foot two-story wooden plant collapsed today under the weight of a season's herring catch and tumbled Into Passa- maquoddy bay with Its 25 men and women employees. None was seriously hurt The buUding floated in the bay and plant ofriclala said the high tide prevented complete de- struction of the 39-year-o!d structure. C. W, Kelly, the owner, esti- mated damage at $50,000, Includ- ; Ing 100 tons of herring. G.0.P.T0PICK NEW CANDIDATE FORSECRETARY (TWKI.VE PAGCS3) PRICE THKEE CENTS Mrs. Crawford Favored For Selection To Fill Vacancy Caused By Death Of Mrs. Lewis In The Hurricane. AVERS ROADS HANDLE MORE FREIGHT NOW Brotherhood Official Says Extra Business Done With Milfion Less Employes Than Working In 1920. Thomaa J. Mooney Howamiv John r. Plaarty. Mooo- ey’e oounaeL told newsmen “wo are not through yet" and obtained per- mlaalon from Chief Justice Hughes to submit papers within twenty -days to bring an original acUon ^ t h tha high tribunal eeekiiig a writ of habaes corpus. Similar acUon three years ago was unsuccesafuL Pardon StUl Poostble It stUI la possible for a governor of California to grant a pardon. Tbla step to one of the issues in the present gubematorlai contest in* that state. For years Mooney has been waging a fight for freedom. Refuaal of a review means that tha high tribunal declined to inter- fere with a decision against Mooney by the California Supreme court. The Mooney action was one of approximately $00 peUUona for re- view upon which the court acted to- day. The large number accumulated during the four months' summer re- cess. The annoimcement for each case oonslsted usually of only one word—“granted” or “denied." Deetotona On Labor Acttoes The outcome of UUgatlon Invcfiv- ing interpretation of the N a tlo ^ Labor Relationa Act follows: (D —The Ford Motor Company Washington, Oct. 10.— (A P ) —L. E. Keller, research director for the Brotherhood of Maintensmee of Way Employes, told the Prcaldent'a fact fin ^ g board today that a million railroad workers are now bandiinM Xro* freight business t^ 2 , 000 ,000 handled 18 years sgp. KeHer gave the board statistics •howing that the pay of rail work- ers iM dropped 38.8 per cent pei f^ h t-to Q mile since 1920 while tee cost to the pubUe.of ebippinc a ton of freight a mile has derilned only 11 . 1 per cent Testimony by the Brotherhoods began the final week of the Board’s “*’4ered by the Presldenl after .'the unione voted to strike Hartford. Oct. 10.—(A P )—Dele- Xkfes to the Republican state con- vention gathered here this after- noon to select the party's candidate for secretary of state. The place On the ticket waa left TOMnt by the tragic death In the hurricane of Mrs. Helen E. Lewis ofratf'ird. and reconvention of tne delegates was necessitated be- Muse the recent party conclave in N w Haven made no provision for filling vacancies. Observers predicted that Mrs. Sara CrawfoM of Westport would secure the nomination. Mrs. Lewis’ nomination at the New Haven con- ve^on was the first time In the oarty's history that k woman had been named a candidate for an im- portant state post. The reconventloh was scheduled for 2.^0 p. m. in the Foot Guard armory and, it waa expected, would be brief. It waa understood that a resolution would be .offered paying tribute to Mrs. Lewis. Paul L Oomell, the party's public relaUons diriector, wUl report on the progress of the campaign. Stresses Recovery ThenM John A. Danaher, the Republican candidate for U. S. senator, stress- ing the party's campaign theme of "rwovery.’’ told 400 persons at a Wlnsted rally that 'it's about time nov/ that we got what we paid for." “For six years we've been paying for recovery.” the speaker said yes- terday in addressing the Highland Lake park gathering. "Ws haven't got It. It's about time now that we got what we paid for." The rally was Intended primarily as an opportunity for Joseph Talbot of Naugatuck, candldato for treas- urer, to appear befors tha Utchflald county mambera of'tha itorty. RcjtosoiM B. BaJdwlh, gubernato- rial nominee, and James L. Mo- Conaughy, nominee for lieutenant- governor, also spoke. In what was a quiet week-end ft— Vienna Cardinal Mobbed After Sermon I -T.- A stirring sermon in St. RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR ‘LIES’ ABOUT AIR STRENGTH .fjpsSUcaUy. IMB J. Fr .y8toninncin| i^.iarty in o Ttoger M » 81 ^tRateihury " mganicktic HITLER’S AIDE INVESTIGATES SERM0N.RI0TS PoHce Gose Sidewalk Id Front Of Palace As Cori- CDS Crowds Gather At Scene Of Cardinal Injnry. CENSUS BUREAU FINDS MORE ROOM NEEDED. Washington, Oct. 10.— (A P ) — The Census Bureau, which Is go- ing to do a lot of counting tn 1940, checked up today and foupd there wasn’t enough room avail- able In Washington to do the work. It asked real estate men to see what they could do , about supplying 420.000 square feet ot floor space. If necessary, offi- cials said, the Bureau will guar- antee someone enough rental to warrant him to erect a new building. Declare Action Gave herlain Argnments Fm' Surrender Of Czediosb* vakia; Statement Sgned,^ By 11 USSR Fliers, hclil^^ ing Civfl Aviation Chie^j mint Sat 'isitk betra; mads at I Iglnn* tv 'SspubUc ^ErsMlnnil ..Ukeastnatloi Old Lyme, 8*8 Distri WUUam J "Mr. Ball TVi vote I ?nartiey, k 3faHon, Jr tomln H. W. Stoson. nGRTS STi ... L — Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna, pictured at * ' Innltrtr. left, r^sed Catholic ywth to demonstrate against Na=ls, led to a riotous attack CMdlnal" palace by resentful HlUeritcs. The 62-yAr-oW ‘’ 'IT®.. Anschluss last year, was re- ported I Injured by flying glass.'The rioters battered to the door of his residence and scaled walla with ladders. sacred paintings were thrown down to a'bonflre^low. furniture and ITALY HOPEFUL BRITAIN WILL APPROVE ACCORD Issues Renndabont hvita* tion To Consider Djffer- encf^Setded With Proa< ise Of troop'WithdrawaL NAZK WARNED WAR DANGERS SHLL EXIST ^ther than, accept a 19 per cent pay cut The carriers completet? their testimony’ lost week. (Conttoned On Page Iwo) (Csatlnued aa Page rwo.) FAVORS MILITARY BASES IN ALASKA Senator Reynolds Urges Es- tabEsliinent Of Air Forces At Pobt Closest To Japan. Washington. Oct 10.— (A P ) — Senator Reynoids (D., N. C.) a mmbef of the Senate Military Af- fairs Committee, come out strongly today for the rnUltary development . In an Interview published to the Army and Navy Journal, Reynolds rmmmended eetabliahment of a torge Army base at Fairbanks and Kodiak and Slt- The United SUtes, be said, should have defenses at Atu, which la several hundred mSes west of the Hawaiian islands and is the ^tosest United States point to Japan.* “Tbtn ahould be aomethlng at , ilSEf Walnwrlgl t and peiliapa ^°tot Barrow,” he said. ”Mm«- y*” * expect naval MjthorlUm wlU want to develop Dutch harbor.” Orgea Highway Oenetmetloa. i-*^S*‘!fS.*?*** e«*»«trueUon ka highway and said better steam- Aip aervlce was needed between weet coast points and Alaska. He said he inteiided introducina a bffl'ht the next eessioa of gresa ealUng en the State Depazt- tocot to estahUih title to WranMl otoad. northwest at ai«iar« This Savtogs Not Passed On. railroads had f a ^ to give the pubUc, to re- duc^ freight rates, the savings they ^Itoed m wages. I f this had been TOne, he said, business losses to mcka and other forma of transpor- tlon would have been reduced. ^ *** .^.Sfi*®*** toat to the period since 1920 total wages received by ^ wrkers dropped 48 per cent and ths pcrtlon of operating rev- enues used to pay wages dropped 20 por cont. I 'The length of trains has in-- creas^ by 28 per cent and the speed of Uatos risen 93 per cent”, Itollor said. “But with, lodger; heavier and faster trains we have made railroading so efficient that a person is safer today to a railroad passenger car than to his own home , ® P * « t o i g Expenses Lower Tiperatlng expenses, including wages, have fallen 48.9 per cenL much more than the decline In rail- way operating revenues and the roada have been granted freight and passenger rate increases by the In- Commerce (tommlsslon, but atUI the railways Just will not put away their crutch and tin cup.” Keller warned that if railway HAZARDS OF LIFE TO BE DECREASED Cameron, Managing Director Of Safety Connefl Ex* pects Important Gains. (Contianed On Page Sta> treasury balance . Waahlngton. OcL 10.— (A P ) — of the>Treaeury Octo- DCP - Reoelpts, $10,711,147.90; expend- itures. $25.408JS2S.2$: net b a t o ^ 16A89.42. Cuatoma recelpto for the month, $7,078,74S.4Z Chicago. Oct. 10— (A P )—W. H. rameron, managing director of the National , Safety Ciuncil, whose leadership nurtured a $1,400 dream into a $790,000-a-year reality, pre- dlcted today haxards to human life and limb would be reduced much to the next 25 years. Expressing bis views at the out- set of the Council’s silver Jubilee congress, Cameron said his organl- ration's accomplishments to the last quarter century warranted every reasonable expectation of even more important gains The man who baa been the dyna- mo of the movement since 1913 af- Brmed his faith to at least a frac- uonal solution of the country's traf- fic problems. He said: . Cnix Is Edneatton Of Driver crux of It all la the educa- tion of the driver. The day of su- per-highways, faulUessIy marked (UMthraed On Page Two) Colonists In Matanuska Harvesting Potato Crop tor the I^lmeL Alaeka. OcL S.~{XP) w ^tanuska valley colonlats were to w midst of their potato harvest to- day. The potatoes, yielding about five tons to the qcre, were one ot many good crops gathered this year. The coloniste had about gjNiO acres in crops this ssoaon—mosUy bjy^f^galn-compmed with 1 .- Their third annual fair, bald last toonth. consisted of an excellent general display. wlU. garden peas growing six feet tell and fine -*-ndt of pea and oat hay averaging 1 i-i tons to the acre. Coleoy Cannery Aettae The colony eannety put up 1,000 eases of peas this season; 400 cases of carrots. 190 of beets, 139 of as- sorted produce. Many tons await prooeaMng. kaadquarters-raportod the There have oaeo IM hsMaa horn the past umt y r « - Rtoitha doing na ' saat Thrra hundred fourteen ciuidren * ” -.1^**®“ ***“ * consolidated ac- cre<htod achool here, and are or* aranlslng a band. Four Matanuska valley high school graduates have IP**® to the University of Alaska at »lrbanka and two have gone to the States to attend colleges. Te Give Farewell Dance colony plans a dance OcL 11 to fareweu to Leo B. Jacobs, colony manager, who la resigning. Only four colonists hav8 left se- eenUy, dissatisfied with <<goveni- PoWcles and their own In- ability to repa^ Federal loans. AU direct goveimriental advances •re -Secured. First payments art dus on chattel mortgages Nov. 18, but foim colonists already have paid their mortgages in full, and 19 are vnaFptod. . T*®*** ••••»* *We to repay fw y OB govarament aesd loans and Tma onlwiMte hava aadr, pay- Rome. OcL 10—(A P )—Italy Is- sued a roundabout invitation to Britain to consider their outetand- Ing differences asttied today, now tost a start has been promised on withdrawal of Fascist troops in Spain. A bulletin of the official Informa- sione Dlplomatlca of the Foreign Office expresard beUef that a "sub- stantiar repatriation of Italian Le- gionnaires might prompt Britain to make effective the Itallan-Britlsb Mediterranean pgreemenU of April 18. While such a reauR would be wel- come, the statement added, it did not dictate the decision. Occasion for the withdrawal, In- formazlone Dlplomatlca safd, waa that the clvU war "may be consid- ered decided in (Insurgent) Oracr- aUsslmo Franco’s favor." Plans are tor withdrawal of -those Italian LiCglonnalrcs who serv- ed In the conflict for more than 18 months. Unofficial estimates placed the number st 10,000. ( f rench fronUer sources beard 18,000 would leave Spain Wedne^y aboard three Italian troop ships now at Seville, and that some infantry units, artlUery and avlaLon would remain. The Italian government said on OoL 18, 1937 there never were more than 40,000 ItaUan Le gioonalrea in Spain. Highest for elgn esUmatea has been up to 70, .p^slded Before Confereaoe InTormasione Diplomatics de clared the decision to brtog home these flgbtera was decided before uie Munich conference on Craeho- slovakla averted European war danger, and that It was not con nected with the Eliropean Nonin*- tervention Committee efforts to re- move 'aU foreign flgbtera from Spain. Franco side-tracked the Commit- tee plan some weeks ago by m-Hwg lU acosptance condlUonal upon granting of bellgerent righto to tee Insurgents. The Italian declaration insisted on tee “unilateral" character of the withdrawal. .This evident^ meant tee decision was not affected by the Spanish government's announce- ment SepL 21 that lU foreign troops were being retired, an announce- ment which received no pubUcitv in tee Italian press. Frogreaa Toward ReoonoUiatlon 8Sow PoUtleal dreles interpreted the IteUan sUtement to todlcale teat last week's daUy coosultatlona be- tween Foreign Minister Count (Uano and tee Britloh ambassador. Lord Perth, did not make marked prog- ress toward recoociUng Italian- &'ltlsh interests. These quarters considered it cer- tain teat Count caano Informed tee ambassador of the withdrawal plans. The fact teat tee Britloh have not thus far declared eSecUva tee Easter peace understanding waa taken to. indicate teat other obste- clea petalsL Some otowrven believed kb.g<apq IffUer’s Speech At Saar* bmecken Interpreted In Informed Circles; Defense Preparations Condnned. Vienna, Oct. lQ .-y A P ) — Joseph Buerekel, Reichsfuehrer Hitler’s commissioner for Austria, planned today to Investigate personally a stirring sermon preached by Theo- dor Cardinal Innitur, Friday, and subsequent Nasi riots to which tee cardinal was Injured. Buerckel'a Investigation Is to start Immediately on bis arrival here from Saarbruecken, where he Introduced Hitler for bis address yesterday. Police pJosed the sidewalk In front of the archbishop's palace, and euii- oua crowds gathered at tee ecene of Saturday night’s dtoturbances. Palaoe Target For Atteck Informed circles charged teat youthful elements took advantage of tee general tndlgation caused by the sermon preacbe'., by the cardinal Friday night to make his palace tee target for an attack. These sources denied emphatically persistent reports that tee cardinal bad been taken Into protective cus- tody. Rumors spread In Vienna teat Monalgnor Oesqra Onenlgo, papal nuntfio to Barlta, had arrived In ^ enna to confer with C^irdiilal In- nltrar and look over tee damage to ills'residence. The nunclo’e Berlin office, however, said "Monaignor Orsenigo ia back in Berlin”, but made no further explanation. Police Patrol Square Extra police patrolled Cathedral square and invited curioeity seekers HITLER WOULD MAKE CZECHS VASSAL STATE Moscow, OcL 10.—(AP) —Soviefi Russia's leading airmen today emnly denounced CoL Charles Lindbergh In a statement aceu8iii|i? him of spreading lies about air strength to give Prime ter Chamberlain of Britain Berlm Hints Foregoing Fnr- ffier Military Encroach* ment Only U Affiances Fith Powers Are Broken. (UonttMued ee Page 81a.) Berlin. OcL 10.— (A P )—Informed circles today interpreted Chancellor Adolf Hitler’s Saarbruecken speech as a warning to Oennany that tee future stUI carriea war dangers. The chancellor declared teat Ger- many was ready “for a policy of un- derstanding with our neighbors, but was preparing herself defensively more than ever.” He Indicated that Germany would continue especially to keep an eagle eye on three British statesmen—( mCETOEND PURGES” URGED Budget Advocates Voters Take Fmal Adzon In Elections Next Month. (Continued on Page Six) ^ 2 LOSERS SEEK SENATE COMEBACK Chicago, Oct. 10.—(AP)— A purge to end all purges" at Nov- ember elections was urged on American voters today by U. 8. Senator H. Stylea Bridges (R., N. H.) in an address prepared for de- livery before the Union League club, "The President,” Bridges said, "is trying to purge those DemocraU— those of bis own party—who refused to bow to hla will. He baa gam- bled heavily, and he haa lost.’’ Aesalllng WPA Administrator Harry Hopkins, Bridges declared __ T n Hopkins "left no room for a DOnr enneavonuff io K£*J>”toundenitanding. when be publle- 1ly stated that could not conceive m e r Tbeir Fomer Seal»|2.f S ’wmT'” ' "" Follows European Principle. •Dver in Europe, they run on tee Dickinson, Oddie And Bar* Washington. OcL 10.— (A P ) — A scant handful of the Republicans Jteo left Washington when the DemocraU marched to to their tune of “Happy Days’’ U tryliig for comeback in the November voting. Most of those who went out with w successive Democratic surges of 1830, 1982, 1934 and 1936 have xet- down into placid retirement from office-seeking. 8ome art prac- ticing law. Some are back In busi- at their old bbmea. Some are deaA A few have written their menJoira. (Uoethraad On Pnge Two) Prague, Oct. 10.— (A P )—Inform- ed Csech boureee oald today teat Adolf Hitler, having divested Ctech- oelovakla of vital parU of lU na- tional defenaea by mUltary occupa- tion of tee Sudetenland, had begun pressure to reduce what Is left of tee republle to tee status of a vassal gtatfi. n»ss toformanto assarted Berlin had hinted it would forego further military encroachment only If the Prague government speedily broke sUlances with France and Soviet Russia and adopted a policy of com- placence toward boMg drawn Into tee German orbit. They said Berlin already had for- warded an indirect demand that tee i government of the republic follow lU ai'tonomoua Slovak unit to outlaw- ing tee Communist Party. Seeking Ceononle Tie ’ ' The Csecha said Germany -was seeking a strong economic tie, poeel- My a cuatoma union, grappling Csechoalovakia to tea Reich. Fur- ther, Oermsuiy wanU an understand- ing that German troops might pass through Czechoslovak Umtory in tee event of a war in eastern Europe, these sources assarted. Also, it was said, Berlin desires teat Prague adopt a poUcy auilU-. ciently antl-Jewiirii to prevent any antl-Naxi activities by Jews in tee 171 Per Openini R^sti inf Wc t Bvening ‘ ijts w with iber th du tasraons ibtoson, ir Hii sehoo r. Rob was twent; eoursei i at tee Di TH re^Mlc's territory. return for all these conceaelons Germany was said to be ready to allow Cxechoolovakla to exist and enjoy enough Independence to aaqure Ungulstlo and cultural freedom and greater civU Uberty than exisU in Germany, provided ___ Prague curbed wiy internal naovementa opposing Germany In any manner. To Meet Strodg Reelstanoe The Czech informants .said the new German pressure’ would meet with strong resistance by.tee Czech >eople in epite of the desperqU na- ture of their situaUoii. Thla has been made worse than ever tee Germany army’s occupstton of tee fifth zone, which included important portions of the Chwchoelovak fortifl- cstiona system. i However, it was said teat under, tee threat of further German occu- | pation submission might be tee only way of preserving even the sem- blance of Indepenoence. Government sources sold tee Get' ments for tee surrender of CaecR Slovakia. )The Soviet statement appamtlF'' arose from unverified reports i i i t ^ London newspapers teat Ltodbargh bad been critical of tee Soviet air force. (Lindbergh haa made no comment on tee reports. It was not knowizD^ immediately whether he bad ever returned to England after hla vM* to Moscow in August. He was.b* lieved to be in seclusion at bis Ik on niiec island, off the north eo. * of France. (His Visit to- Russia figured to A ' guarded statement during House: of (Ammons debate last Thundkg. ' Ellen Wilktnaon. Laborits. n ld teat'' influential people’! had told Cbah* ceOor Hitler teat In no circus^ atancea would Britain fight for Czechoslovakia, and added teat I t (Ooetteued en Page 81a.) LATE NEW S FLASHES! (Ceattoned,o« Page Six) le j 't\ [\Fye Specialists Studying Melon-Plugging Scheme Washington, Oct. 10— (A P ) Amer-^jurgeons exMatned. VYhen teat Three of those who delivered up Senate seats at the point of election returns in those years are endeavor- ing to recover those seaU. A few others tried in 1938 and failed. Itii Kei Keynoter Banning Out In Iowa, Lester J. Dickinson, tee white-haired Republican who waa krrnoter at tee party's 1932 ooavsntion, is running against Democratic Senator Guy Gillette. Dicklnoon waa defeated two years sgo after serving one term in tee senate. Gillette won renomtoation over ^ opi^Uon of Harry Hopkins. JWA chief. He haa been assured oy Postmaster General Farley, how- ever. at tee backing of tee Demo- cratic NaUooal Committee to tee present campaign. \ Another old-timer is running in Nevada. Tasker L. Oddis, wbo t oat with tee 1W2 Roooevett tea's leading eye speclallsta studied today a watenpelon-plugglng opera- tion on the eye to restore the sight of persons blinded by accidents or infectlona The operation was one of hun- dreds of subjects up for considera- tion at tee annual meeting of the American Academy of Ophthal- mo’oglsta and Oto^arygologlsta. It calls for the use of a special twin” surgical knife, invented by Dr. Ramon Outrovlejo ot New York city, which outlines a square win- dow in the center ot tee cornea, or outer covering of tee front part of tee eye, in preparation for inserting a new one. Another special knife removes the outlined portion Hke a watepneloo plug and replaces it with a aUnllar Mt of tissue from tee eye of another person. Edgw Not SUtclMd The edges ore . 80 $ done in tee pasL tee new window became as clouded as the one It re- placed. Instead four stitches ere made near tee corners of tee eyeball. Tiny surgical threads are attached to teem to hold the window In place unUl it unites with tee eye. “This operation Is one which has b w frequenUy referred to as re* placement of an eye, or the donation ***.?*L®^ one person to another, said Dr. Harry 8. GracDe of.Chicago, president of the academy. ' Traasptoattag Eye Imiioeaible It la Impoeible to take aa eye from one person and make it func- tion in tee eyceocket of another. It U also impossible to take part of tee aye from an animal and moke it work in tee human eye." In a limited number of ____ where-ooly tee edraqa of tee eye haa been damaged. Dr. Gradle added. U WOULD SOLVE HOLDUP New York. OcL 18—(APl—Owi World-Telegram says DlattM At* tornsy William F. X. Gvogboa el Brockljii has information wUeb will solve the daring S411J>00 hold-ag of an armored car tn 1984 as well as two slaylags beFetofore not kMaoi to be connected with tee robbery. The newspaper says that autesr- Itlcs, after foor years of toteostro iavestigatloa oow, tor tee first Itote. have a true picture of the ertma tee evrnts leading up to mu) (oUewteg it, together with tee ideatitlea st all the characters and tlie roles they played. • v • TO .\1D REFUGEES Birtlmore, OcL 10— (A P )—Ibr- tecr steps to aid reEglotts nkngtiqs wbo come to the United States aad Canada wero rcoommeadad by Iks Innar Blisaloa Board to tea tlte bi- ennial oonvcntloa of the United L8- teeraa Church in .Lmarlea today. Tbs Board' asked teat it be ante^ toed to cooperate w!Ui tee Loteeraa Werld oonventlaa In oaring for ra- Uglous refugees. '< FOUND UN.CONSOIorS Bartfard. OcL t » —(A P) >— mea tkia neon foond Rdward Fowler uaeonseteas tn a i reem of^hia aparfmsat. A .sue t PER^ R's real] sure yc pemaae * It tn adv treatmei flciol ant h H e > BE.^ Harriett 1 % 129. Td No* sntched is pfwRhIe to perform tee wimlow $ ^*11 VT**^*"^ reeplrattoa FV.vter.
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RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR 'LIES' ABOUT AIR ...

Jan 29, 2023

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Page 1: RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR 'LIES' ABOUT AIR ...

a *

^

AVratAOB DAILT OmOCLATIOM for the Month of Beptember, 1818

6,286Member e f the AaMI

Boreaa ef Obmtottoaa

VOL. LVIII, NO. 8M A N C H E STE R — A C IT Y OF V IL L A G E C H AR M

THE WEATHER Foreeeet M 0. 8. Weather

Hartford

Fair tonight; Taeaday fair with •lowly rtaing temperatore.

(Uaoalftod Adverttolag on Fage Id)

0.

SUPREME TRIBUNAL REFUSES TO HEAR MOONEY’S APPEAL

Justices Bbck And Reed Take Rarely-Dsed Step Of DeuotKg Dissent; Counsel Plans Further Action.

UERBINO t o o WEIGHTY; ^ — n SH PLANT COLLAPSES '

Waahlngton, OcL 10—(A P )—The Supreme court refused today to re-view Thomaa J. Ifooneya lateat ap-peal for releaae from San Quentin penitentiary.

Mooney la aerving a life Mntence for complicity In the 1918 Prepared- neas day parade bombing In San Franctoco.

JuBtlcea Black and Reed took the rarely-uaed step to denoting their dlasent to the court'e* order which apparenUy closed the door to eny hope that Mooney may obtain re-learn through court action—imiiw..

evidence ahould be discovered.

^

Lubec, Me.. Oct 10.— (A P )— A 200-foot two-story wooden plant collapsed today under the weight of a season's herring catch and tumbled Into Passa- maquoddy bay with Its 25 men and women employees. None was seriously hurt

The buUding floated in the bay and plant ofriclala said the high tide prevented complete de-struction of the 39-year-o!d structure.

C. W, Kelly, the owner, esti-mated damage at $50,000, Includ-

; Ing 100 tons of herring.

G .0 .P .T0PIC K NEW CANDIDATE FORSECRETARY

(TWKI.VE PAGCS3) PRICE THKEE CENTS

Mrs. Crawford Favored For Selection To Fill Vacancy Caused By Death Of Mrs. Lewis In The Hurricane.

AVERS ROADS HANDLE MORE

FREIGHT NOWBrotherhood Official Says

Extra Business Done With Milfion Less Employes Than Working In 1920.

Thomaa J. Mooney

Howamiv John r. Plaarty. Mooo-ey’e oounaeL told newsmen “wo are not through yet" and obtained per- mlaalon from Chief Justice Hughes to submit papers within twenty -days to bring an original acUon ^ t h tha high tribunal eeekiiig a writ of habaes corpus.

Similar acUon three years ago was unsuccesafuL

Pardon StUl Poostble It stUI la possible for a governor

of California to grant a pardon. Tbla step to one of the issues in the present gubematorlai contest in* that state. For years Mooney has been waging a fight for freedom.

Refuaal of a review means that tha high tribunal declined to inter-fere with a decision against Mooney by the California Supreme court.

The Mooney action was one of approximately $00 peUUona for re-view upon which the court acted to-day.

The large number accumulated during the four months' summer re-cess. The annoimcement for each case oonslsted usually of only one word—“granted” or “denied."

Deetotona On Labor Act toes The outcome of UUgatlon Invcfiv-

ing interpretation of the N a tlo^ Labor Relationa Act follows:

(D —The Ford Motor Company

Washington, Oct. 10.— (AP ) —L. E. Keller, research director for the Brotherhood of Maintensmee of Way Employes, told the Prcaldent'a fact f in ^ g board today that a million railroad workers are now bandiinM

Xro* freight business t ^ 2,000,000 handled 18 years sgp.

KeHer gave the board statistics •howing that the pay of rail work-ers iM dropped 38.8 per cent pei f^ h t-toQ mile since 1920 while tee cost to the pubUe.of ebippinc a ton o f freight a mile has derilned only 11.1 per cent

Testimony by the Brotherhoods began the final week of the Board’s

“ *’4ered by the Presldenl after .'the unione voted to strike

Hartford. Oct. 10.—(A P )—Dele- Xkfes to the Republican state con-vention gathered here this after-noon to select the party's candidate for secretary of state.

The place On the ticket waa left TOMnt by the tragic death In the hurricane of Mrs. Helen E. Lewis

ofratf'ird. and reconvention of tne delegates was necessitated be- Muse the recent party conclave in N w Haven made no provision for filling vacancies.

Observers predicted that Mrs. Sara CrawfoM of Westport would secure the nomination. Mrs. Lewis’ nomination at the New Haven con- ve^on was the first time In the oarty's history that k woman had been named a candidate for an im-portant state post.

The reconventloh was scheduled for 2.^0 p. m. in the Foot Guard armory and, it waa expected, would be brief. It waa understood that a resolution would be . offered paying tribute to Mrs. Lewis.

Paul L Oomell, the party's public relaUons diriector, wUl report on the progress of the campaign.

Stresses Recovery ThenMJohn A. Danaher, the Republican

candidate for U. S. senator, stress-ing the party's campaign theme of "rwovery.’’ told 400 persons at a Wlnsted rally that 'it's about time nov/ that we got what we paid for."

“For six years we've been paying for recovery.” the speaker said yes-terday in addressing the Highland Lake park gathering. "Ws haven't got It. It's about time now that we got what we paid for."

The rally was Intended primarily as an opportunity for Joseph Talbot of Naugatuck, candldato for treas-urer, to appear befors tha Utchflald county mambera of'tha itorty.

RcjtosoiM B. BaJdwlh, gubernato-rial nominee, and James L. Mo- Conaughy, nominee for lieutenant- governor, also spoke.

In what was a quiet week-end

ft—Vienna Cardinal Mobbed A fte r Sermon

I

-T.-

A stirring sermon in St.

RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR ‘LIES’ ABOUT AIR STRENGTH

.fjpsSUcaUy. IMB J. Fr

.y8toninncin| i^ .ia rty in o

T to ge r M » 81 ^tRateihury " mganicktic

HITLER’S AIDE INVESTIGATES SERM0N.RI0TS

PoHce Gose Sidewalk Id

Front Of Palace As Cori- CDS Crowds Gather At Scene Of Cardinal Injnry.

CENSUS BUREAU FINDSMORE ROOM NEEDED.

Washington, Oct. 10.—(AP ) — The Census Bureau, which Is go-ing to do a lot of counting tn 1940, checked up today and foupd there wasn’t enough room avail-able In Washington to do the work.

It asked real estate men to see what they could do , about supplying 420.000 square feet ot floor space. I f necessary, offi-cials said, the Bureau will guar-antee someone enough rental to warrant him to erect a new building.

Declare Action Gave herlain Argnments Fm' Surrender Of Czediosb* vakia; Statement Sgned,^ By 11 USSR Fliers, hclil^^ ing Civfl Aviation Chie^j

mint Sat 'isitk betra; mads at I I g ln n * tv

'SspubUc ^ErsMlnnil ..Ukeastnatloi

Old Lyme, 8*8 Distri WUUam J

"Mr. Ball TVi vote I ?nartiey, k 3faHon, Jrtomln H. W. Stoson.

nGRTSSTi

... L — Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna, pictured at * ' Innl trtr. left, r^sed

Catholic ywth to demonstrate against Na=ls, led to a riotous attack CMdlnal" palace by resentful HlUeritcs. The 62-yAr-oW

‘’ 'IT®.. Anschluss last year, was re-ported I Injured by flying glass.'The rioters battered to the door of his residence and scaled walla with ladders.sacred paintings were thrown down to a'bonflre^low. furniture and

ITALY HOPEFUL BRITAIN WILL APPROVE ACCORD

Issues Renndabont hvita* tion To Consider Djffer- encf^Setded With Proa< ise Of troop'WithdrawaL

NAZK WARNED WAR DANGERS

SHLL EXIST^ther than, accept a 19 per cent pay cut The carriers completet? their testimony’ lost week.

(Conttoned On Page Iwo)

(Csatlnued aa Page rwo.)

FAVORS MILITARY BASES IN ALASKA

Senator Reynolds Urges Es- tabEsliinent Of Air Forces At Pobt Closest To Japan.

Washington. Oct 10.— (AP ) — Senator Reynoids (D., N. C.) a mmbef of the Senate Military A f-fairs Committee, come out strongly today for the rnUltary development

. In an Interview published to the Army and Navy Journal, Reynolds rmmmended eetabliahment of a torge Army base at Fairbanks and

Kodiak and Slt- The United SUtes, be said,

should have defenses at Atu, which la several hundred mSes west of the Hawaiian islands and is the tosest United States point to Japan.*

“T b tn ahould be aomethlng at , ilSE f Walnwrlgl t and peiliapa ^°tot Barrow,” he said. ”Mm«-

y * ” * expect naval MjthorlUm wlU want to develop Dutch harbor.”

Orgea Highway Oenetmetloa. i-*^S *‘!fS .*? ** * e«*»«trueUonka highway and said better steam- A ip aervlce was needed between weet coast points and Alaska.

He said he inteiided introducina a bffl'ht the next eessioa of gresa ealUng en the State Depazt- tocot to estahUih title to WranMl otoad. northwest at ai«iar« This

Savtogs Not Passed On.railroads

had f a ^ to give the pubUc, to re- duc^ freight rates, the savings they ^ Itoed m wages. I f this had been TOne, he said, business losses to mcka and other forma of transpor- tlon would have been reduced.^ *** . .Sfi*®*** toat to the period since 1920 total wages received by ^ wrkers dropped 48 per cent and ths pcrtlon of operating rev-enues used to pay wages dropped 20 por cont. I

'The length of trains has in-- creas^ by 28 per cent and the speed of Uatos risen 93 per cent”, Itollor said. “But with, lodger; heavier and faster trains we have made railroading so efficient that a person is safer today to a railroad passenger car than to his own home

,® P * « to ig Expenses Lower Tiperatlng expenses, including

wages, have fallen 48.9 per cenL much more than the decline In rail-way operating revenues and the roada have been granted freight and passenger rate increases by the In-

Commerce (tommlsslon, but atUI the railways Just will not put away their crutch and tin cup.”

Keller warned that if railway

HAZARDS OF LIFE TO BE DECREASED

Cameron, Managing Director Of Safety Connefl Ex* pects Important Gains.

(Contianed On Page Sta>

t r e a s u r y b a l a n c e .

Waahlngton. OcL 10.—(A P ) — of the>Treaeury Octo-

DCP -Reoelpts, $10,711,147.90; expend-

itures. $25.408JS2S.2$: net b a to ^ 16A89.42. Cuatoma recelpto

for the month, $7,078,74S.4Z

Chicago. Oct. 10— (A P )—W. H. rameron, managing director of the National , Safety Ciuncil, whose leadership nurtured a $1,400 dream into a $790,000-a-year reality, pre- dlcted today haxards to human life and limb would be reduced much to the next 25 years.

Expressing bis views at the out-set of the Council’s silver Jubilee congress, Cameron said his organl- ration's accomplishments to the last quarter century warranted every reasonable expectation of even more important gains

The man who baa been the dyna-mo of the movement since 1913 af- Brmed his faith to at least a frac- uonal solution of the country's traf-fic problems. He said:

. Cnix Is Edneatton Of Driver crux of It all la the educa-

tion of the driver. The day of su-per-highways, faulUessIy marked

(UMthraed On Page Two)

Colonists In Matanuska Harvesting Potato Crop

tor the

I^lmeL Alaeka. OcL S .~ {X P ) w ^tanuska valley colonlats were to w midst of their potato harvest to- day.

The potatoes, yielding about five tons to the qcre, were one ot many good crops gathered this year.

The coloniste had about gjNiO acres in crops this ssoaon—mosUy bjy^f^galn-compmed with 1.-

Their third annual fair, bald last toonth. consisted of an excellent general display. wlU. garden peas growing six feet tell and fine -*-ndt of pea and oat hay averaging 1 i - i tons to the acre.

Coleoy Cannery AettaeThe colony eannety put up 1,000

eases of peas this season; 400 cases of carrots. 190 of beets, 139 of as-sorted produce. Many tons await prooeaMng.

kaadquarters-raportod the There have

oaeo IM hsMaa horn the past umt y r « - Rtoitha doing na ' saat

Thrra hundred fourteen ciuidren *” -.1 **®“ ***“ * consolidated ac- cre<htod achool here, and are or* aranlslng a band. Four Matanuska valley high school graduates have IP**® to the University of Alaska at »lrbanka and two have gone to the States to attend colleges.

Te Give Farewell Dance colony plans a dance OcL 11

to fareweu to Leo B. Jacobs, colony manager, who la resigning.

Only four colonists hav8 left se- eenUy, dissatisfied with <<goveni-

PoWcles and their own In-ability to repa^ Federal loans.

AU direct goveimriental advances •re -Secured. First payments art dus on chattel mortgages Nov. 18, but foim colonists already have paid their mortgages in full, and 19 are vnaFptod.. T*®*** ••••»* *We to repayfw y OB govarament aesd loans and

Tma onlwiMte hava aadr, pay-

Rome. OcL 10—(A P )—Italy Is-sued a roundabout invitation to Britain to consider their outetand- Ing differences asttied today, now tost a start has been promised on withdrawal of Fascist troops in Spain.

A bulletin of the official Informa- sione Dlplomatlca of the Foreign Office expresard beUef that a "sub- stantiar repatriation of Italian Le-gionnaires might prompt Britain to make effective the Itallan-Britlsb Mediterranean pgreemenU of April 18.

While such a reauR would be wel-come, the statement added, it did not dictate the decision.

Occasion for the withdrawal, In- formazlone Dlplomatlca safd, waa that the clvU war "may be consid-ered decided in (Insurgent) Oracr- aUsslmo Franco’s favor."

Plans are tor withdrawal of -those Italian LiCglonnalrcs who serv-ed In the conflict for more than 18 months. Unofficial estimates placed the number st 10,000. ( f renchfronUer sources beard 18,000 would leave Spain W edne^y aboard three Italian troop ships now at Seville, and that some infantry units, artlUery and avlaLon would remain. The Italian government said on OoL 18, 1937 there never were more than 40,000 ItaUan Le gioonalrea in Spain. Highest for elgn esUmatea has been up to 70,

.p^slded Before Confereaoe InTormasione Diplomatics de

clared the decision to brtog home these flgbtera was decided before uie Munich conference on Craeho- slovakla averted European war danger, and that It was not con nected with the Eliropean Nonin*- tervention Committee efforts to re-move 'aU foreign flgbtera from Spain.

Franco side-tracked the Commit-tee plan some weeks ago by m-Hwg lU acosptance condlUonal upon granting of bellgerent righto to tee Insurgents. —

The Italian declaration insisted on tee “unilateral" character of the withdrawal. .This evident^ meant tee decision was not affected by the Spanish government's announce-ment SepL 21 that lU foreign troops were being retired, an announce-ment which received no pubUcitv in tee Italian press.

Frogreaa Toward ReoonoUiatlon 8Sow

PoUtleal dreles interpreted the IteUan sUtement to todlcale teat last week's daUy coosultatlona be-tween Foreign Minister Count (Uano and tee Britloh ambassador. Lord Perth, did not make marked prog-ress toward recoociUng Italian- &'ltlsh interests.

These quarters considered it cer-tain teat Count caano Informed tee ambassador of the withdrawal plans. The fact teat tee Britloh have not thus far declared eSecUva tee Easter peace understanding waa taken to. indicate teat other obste- clea petalsL

Some otowrven believed kb.g<apq

IffUer’s Speech At Saar* bmecken Interpreted In Informed Circles; Defense Preparations Condnned.

Vienna, Oct. lQ .-yAP) — Joseph Buerekel, Reichsfuehrer Hitler’s commissioner for Austria, planned today to Investigate personally a stirring sermon preached by Theo-dor Cardinal Innitur, Friday, and subsequent Nasi riots to which tee cardinal was Injured.

Buerckel'a Investigation Is to start Immediately on bis arrival here from Saarbruecken, where he Introduced Hitler for bis address yesterday.

Police pJosed the sidewalk In front of the archbishop's palace, and euii- oua crowds gathered at tee ecene of Saturday night’s dtoturbances.

Palaoe Target For Atteck Informed circles charged teat

youthful elements took advantage of tee general tndlgation caused by the sermon preacbe'., by the cardinal Friday night to make his palace tee target for an attack.

These sources denied emphatically persistent reports that tee cardinal bad been taken Into protective cus-tody.

Rumors spread In Vienna teat Monalgnor Oesqra Onenlgo, papal nuntfio to Barlta, had arrived In ^ enna to confer with C irdiilal In- nltrar and look over tee damage to ills'residence. The nunclo’e Berlin office, however, said "Monaignor Orsenigo ia back in Berlin”, but made no further explanation.

Police Patrol SquareExtra police patrolled Cathedral

square and invited curioeity seekers

HITLER WOULD MAKE CZECHS VASSAL STATE

Moscow, OcL 10.— (A P ) —Soviefi Russia's leading airmen today emnly denounced CoL Charles Lindbergh In a statement aceu8iii|i? him of spreading lies about ’air strength to give Prime ter Chamberlain of Britain

Berlm Hints Foregoing Fnr- ffier Military Encroach* ment Only U Affiances Fith Powers Are Broken.

(UonttMued ee Page 81a.)

Berlin. OcL 10.— (A P )—Informed circles today interpreted Chancellor Adolf Hitler’s Saarbruecken speech as a warning to Oennany that tee future stUI carriea war dangers.

The chancellor declared teat Ger-many was ready “ for a policy of un-derstanding with our neighbors, but was preparing herself defensively more than ever.”

He Indicated that Germany would continue especially to keep an eagle eye on three British statesmen—(

mCETOENDPURGES” URGED

Budget Advocates Voters Take Fmal Adzon In Elections Next Month.

(Continued on Page Six)

^ 2 LOSERS SEEK SENATE COMEBACK

Chicago, Oct. 10.—(A P )— A purge to end all purges" at Nov-

ember elections was urged on American voters today by U. 8. Senator H. Stylea Bridges (R., N. H.) in an address prepared for de-livery before the Union League club,

"The President,” Bridges said, "is trying to purge those DemocraU— those of bis own party—who refused to bow to hla will. He baa gam-bled heavily, and he haa lost.’’

Aesalllng WPA Administrator Harry Hopkins, Bridges declared

__ • T n Hopkins "left no room for aDOnr enneavonuff io K£*J>”toundenitanding. when be publle-

1 ly stated that could not conceive

m e r Tbeir Fomer Seal»|2.f S ’wmT'” ' " "Follows European Principle.

•Dver in Europe, they run on tee

Dickinson, Oddie And Bar*

Washington. OcL 10.— (AP ) — A scant handful of the Republicans Jteo left Washington when the DemocraU marched to to their tune of “Happy Days’’ U tryliig for comeback in the November voting.

Most of those who went out with w successive Democratic surges of 1830, 1982, 1934 and 1936 have xet-

down into placid retirement from office-seeking. 8ome art prac-ticing law. Some are back In busi-

at their old bbmea. Some are deaA A few have written their menJoira.

(Uoethraad On Pnge Two)

Prague, Oct. 10.— (A P )—Inform-ed Csech boureee oald today teat Adolf Hitler, having divested Ctech- oelovakla of vital parU of lU na-tional defenaea by mUltary occupa-tion of tee Sudetenland, had begun pressure to reduce what Is left of tee republle to tee status of a vassal gtatfi.■n»ss toformanto assarted Berlin

had hinted it would forego further military encroachment only If the Prague government speedily broke sUlances with France and Soviet Russia and adopted a policy of com-placence toward boMg drawn Into tee German orbit.

They said Berlin already had for-warded an indirect demand that tee i government of the republic follow lU ai'tonomoua Slovak unit to outlaw-ing tee Communist Party.

Seeking Ceononle Tie ’ ' The Csecha said Germany -was

seeking a strong economic tie, poeel- My a cuatoma union, grappling Csechoalovakia to tea Reich. Fur-ther, Oermsuiy wanU an understand-ing that German troops might pass through Czechoslovak Umtory in tee event of a war in eastern Europe, these sources assarted.

Also, it was said, Berlin desires teat Prague adopt a poUcy auilU-. ciently antl-Jewiirii to prevent any antl-Naxi activities by Jews in tee

171 Per Openini R ^ s t i in f Wc

t Bvening■ ‘ ijts w

with iber th

du tasraons

ibtoson, ir Hii

sehoo r. Rob

was twent;

eourseii

at tee

D i

TH

re^Mlc's territory.return for all these conceaelons

Germany was said to be ready to allow Cxechoolovakla to exist and enjoy enough Independence to aaqure Ungulstlo and cultural freedom andgreater civU Uberty than exisU in Germany, provided___ Prague curbedwiy internal naovementa opposing Germany In any manner.

To Meet Strodg Reelstanoe The Czech informants .said the

new German pressure’ would meet with strong resistance by.tee Czech >eople in epite of the desperqU na-ture of their situaUoii. Thla has been made worse than ever tee Germany army’s occupstton of tee fifth zone, which included important portions of the Chwchoelovak fortifl- cstiona system. i

However, it was said teat under, tee threat of further German occu- | pation submission might be tee only way of preserving even the sem-blance of Indepenoence.

Government sources sold tee Get'

ments for tee surrender of CaecR Slovakia.

)The Soviet statement appamtlF'' arose from unverified reports i i i t ^ London newspapers teat Ltodbargh bad been critical of tee Soviet air force.

( Lindbergh haa made no comment on tee reports. It was not knowizD^ immediately whether he bad ever returned to England after hla vM* to Moscow in August. He was.b* lieved to be in seclusion at bis Ik on niiec island, off the north eo. * of France.

(His Visit to- Russia figured to A ' guarded statement during House: of (Ammons debate last Thundkg. ' Ellen Wilktnaon. Laborits. n ld teat''influential people’! had told Cbah*

ceOor Hitler teat In no circus^ atancea would Britain fight for Czechoslovakia, and added teat I t

(Ooetteued en Page 81a.)

L A T E N E W SFLASHES!

(Ceattoned,o« Page Six)

le j 't\

[\Fye Specialists Studying Melon-Plugging Scheme

Washington, Oct. 10— (AP ) Amer-^jurgeons exMatned. VYhen teat

Three of those who delivered up Senate seats at the point of election returns in those years are endeavor-ing to recover those seaU. A fewothers tried in 1938 and failed.

I t i i KeiKeynoter Banning Out In Iowa, Lester J. Dickinson,

tee white-haired Republican who waa krrnoter at tee party's 1932 ooavsntion, is running against Democratic Senator Guy Gillette. Dicklnoon waa defeated two years sgo after serving one term in tee senate.

Gillette won renomtoation over ^ op i^U on of Harry Hopkins. JWA chief. He haa been assured oy Postmaster General Farley, how-ever. at tee backing of tee Demo-cratic NaUooal Committee to tee present campaign. \

Another old-timer is running in Nevada. Tasker L. Oddis, wbo

t oat with tee 1W2 Roooevett

tea's leading eye speclallsta studied today a watenpelon-plugglng opera-tion on the eye to restore the sight of persons blinded by accidents or infectlona

The operation was one of hun-dreds of subjects up for considera-tion at tee annual meeting of the American Academy of Ophthal- mo’oglsta and Oto^arygologlsta.

It calls for the use of a special twin” surgical knife, invented by

Dr. Ramon Outrovlejo ot New York city, which outlines a square win-dow in the center ot tee cornea, or outer covering of tee front part of tee eye, in preparation for inserting a new one.

Another special knife removes the outlined portion Hke a watepneloo plug and replaces it with a aUnllar Mt of tissue from tee eye of another person.

Edgw Not SUtclMd The edges

ore .80$

done in tee pasL tee new window became as clouded as the one It re-placed.

Instead four stitches ere made near tee corners of tee eyeball. Tiny surgical threads are attached to teem to hold the window In placeunUl it unites with tee eye.

“This operation Is one which has b w frequenUy referred to as re* placement of an eye, or the donation ***.?*L®^ one person to another, said Dr. Harry 8. GracDe of.Chicago, president of the academy. '

Traasptoattag Eye Imiioeaible It la Impoeible to take aa eye

from one person and make it func-tion in tee eyceocket of another. It U also impossible to take part of tee aye from an animal and moke it work in tee human eye."

In a limited number of ____where-ooly tee edraqa of tee eye haa been damaged. Dr. Gradle added. U

WOULD SOLVE HOLDUP New York. OcL 18—(A P l—Owi

World-Telegram says DlattM At* tornsy William F. X. Gvogboa el Brockljii has information wUeb will solve the daring S411J>00 hold-ag of an armored car tn 1984 as well as two slaylags beFetofore not kMaoi to be connected with tee robbery. The newspaper says that autesr- Itlcs, after foor years of toteostro iavestigatloa oow, tor tee first Itote. have a true picture of the ertma tee evrnts leading up to mu) (oUewteg it, together with tee ideatitlea st all the characters and tlie roles they played.

• v •TO .\1D REFUGEES

Birtlmore, OcL 10— (A P )—Ibr- tecr steps to aid reEglotts nkngtiqs wbo come to the United States aad Canada wero rcoommeadad by Iks Innar Blisaloa Board to tea tlte bi-ennial oonvcntloa of the United L8- teeraa Church in .Lmarlea today. Tbs Board' asked teat it be a n te^ toed to cooperate w!Ui tee Loteeraa Werld oonventlaa In oaring for ra- Uglous refugees. '<

FOUND UN.CONSOIorS Bartfard. OcL t » —(A P ) >—

mea tkia neon foond Rdward Fowler uaeonseteas tn a i reem of^hia aparfmsat. A

. s u e

t P E R ^R's real]sure ycpemaae

* It tn advtreatmeiflciol ant

h H e

> BE.^

Harriett 1

% 129.T d

No* sntched is pfwRhIe to perform tee wimlow

$ *1 1 VT***"^reeplrattoa FV.vter.

Page 2: RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR 'LIES' ABOUT AIR ...

BKAnnumann OR a r i a m i r a n a n A U V , a A n u n c s i i s i c . v u r m ^ n u m / A Z , u i / i v i 0 c n l o , Z98B

lag tonlcbt, tomorrow nlsbt ^lid WcdnMdKy; BnKllsh at Um main buildlna on W«dnMday nlfht; cook* Ing will bo bold tonlfbt aod tomor-row' olfbt at tbe FrankUo buUdiac; aewlnc toblsbt and tomorrow night at tbo Baat SIdo Roc and bookkeep-ing tomorrow night in the Franklin building. All claaaeo are from 7 to B o’clock.

The teachera Will be aa foUowaTyping, Mra Mable Rogera and Rua- aelf Wright: atenography.

____Damoeratio Itata Ckalr-IJ. Francta Smith o f WaUrbury

.stated aOant <m tba action of aterbury tndapendent Democrata

Vj'ihmiinrlng Mm ata leader of the '.. aity tn city and atate.'-^Rogar V. .Oonnor, president, and

"»lE««ano Shaahan. aecrataiy of the < ! IMttntniry fiidependent Democratic

ORanlsatlon laauad a signed. atata- mant Saturday charging Smith

Fr^ith betraying them on agreemenU jrf'aaada at the ao-called “harmony" ^iSagitoRS two months ago,

Mary MltcAall and Bphtth; bookkeeping,Wright; cooking, Mfaa H sawing, MIm Nallle Johnson; Bhig- Uah, Miss Halen Estes.

MrsMiss Doris

Russell [as Helen Smith;

“PURGE TO ENDPURGES” URGED

A?enenU F «r Czediosli^^ mt Signei| ers,hclii^| tion Chie^l

*SE5^Nicans oompleted their Con , , , -fCiaarional Ucket Saturday with the y!i86ltiiisUon of Tbonuui R. Ba U of Old l<yme, ea-lsglslator, in the Sec and District, to run against Cong.

iWUUam J. Fltagsrald. Democrat .'filr . Ball defeated four opponents.

vote was; Ball. 107; George A.^j!*tV«tiay, Middletown, M; John M.

ifallon, Jr., New London, 3S; Ben-jamin H. Hewitt MysUc, 4. George % . Sisson. New London, withdrew.

(OoBtiniiad from Page One)

NKBT SCHOOL CLASSES START THIS EVENING

AP) —Soaiefl en today L Charles sent aceuaiiiR. about Prime Britain

171 Persons Enrolled For Opening; t Expect Larger R^stmAlon During Open-ing Week.

Baaning acbool claaaaa In aix pnhlaria wUl gat underway thla eve

1ng with 171 peraona enrolled, i jjnber that Is expected to be In-

»?.^aaaaed during the week as addltlon- ’ pi haraons raglstar. Chsaterd L.

Mhoson. rics-princlpal of Man AMBtsr High, la prindpal of the ave- dng aehooL H r, Robtnsoo aald that English.

sUeh was a few short of tha nsces- •ly twenty slaetlons, will be one of iM eoursss offsrsd.

Classes tn beginning and advene- id stenography and typing will be laid at tbe main High achool bulld-

W M / tJt* w orld f too tk it p lttm ro l. , .

SiCiBSS with in Isaghttr ad In lean it will sachsai f . . enrapters. . . catctMla I

ichsa tma

T o w rDaughters

' let* L*M . OAU MOI OAUM SAM . JOHN OASnnn

jnrsiv ivNN. Moi soban

m tm m tH m e u t k O M jm

mrgh

r of

t apparantlP; iporta in two kt Lindbergh a Soviet air

think as I think or you'," Bridges said

The- New Deal over here follows with, 'vote as I say, or I’ll purge or starve you.'"

I'The only way In which wc can Insure the continuance of our Amer-ican form of government," Bridges concluded, “ la to defeat all those who have sold ‘we, the people* down the river for power, pap and patron-age. Let us next month stage a purge of eur own. A purge to end all purges."

Asserting that 90 per cent of the Important legislation before the last Congress was mainly designed to give the administration more con-trol, Bridges said the American pub-lic "cannot afford to permit thla boring-from-within process which at-tempts to strip the people of their liberties, their property and their guaranteed rights under the false cloak of pseudo-liberalism''.

R a^ Social Security ActCriticising tha administration of

the Social Security act. Bridges de- clarsd that the government collect-ed over 700 millions In old age pen- siona under the act and hdb paid out about 6 millions In benefits. The bal-ance. he said, “went to pay current running axpsnaas.

"If any banker were to misuse trust funds, as the social security funds are being misused, be would be a long-time inmate of a peniten- Uaiy."

THOt’OHTS WHILE ROLUNU

Graaha, Neb.--What doss a man think about when his automobile overturns? ^

Robert O. Simmons, candidate for chief Justice of Nebrdhka'a Supreme Court, found out when a blowout sent hla car rolling.

'7 thought 'now ril be late for my speech’,” he said.

He thumbed a ride, made two speech es.

NOTICE!

LUEnCENSTOSTAR IN “ROOM SERVICE”

Local ^nateor Again Select-d To Pby Principal Pkrt

In Commnnity’s Offering.

Dead ‘Skunk Discovered In main St. Doorway

The part of Gordon Miller tn tbe Community Players production or “Room Service" will be portrayed by “Bill" Luettgena. BUI is weU known for hts able work In our little theater and especially remembered for his staunch snactment of Cap

William Luettgena

tain Stanhope In "Journey’s End" and tbe eccentric D luy Davia In 'Celling Zero.”

Aa tbe producer of “Goodspeed'', thi. play within tbe play. Bill should ahina ones more. The rol« gives him much leew:ay to let loose bis exuber-ant psraonallty. HU valiant efforts to gat bU production before the footllghU despite lack of funda, the heckling of a hoetlle hotel manage-ment, and tbe numerous baadacbea, and worries that go with hla posi-tion, should prove entertaining to all who wttnaas his performapes.

'Room Ssrvlce" will be presented by the players on October 18th and 19th at Whiton Memorial Hall.

Business Manager Olenney wishes to announce that there are still many good seats available.

Those persons who have not ob-tained reserved . seata can secure them at Kemp's Inc., R. S. Potter- ton's and Keller's Men's Shop.

The Republican delegates to the Probate convention In the Andover dUtrict, comprising of the towns of Andover, Bolton and Oolumbla, will meet in convention at Andover Town Hall on Saturday, October IS. at 3:30 P. M., for the purpose of nominating a candidate for Judge of Probate.

To elect a Probate Committee for next. 3 years.

To do any other business proper to come before said convention.

Dated at Andover this 8th day of October. 1938.

L. B. WHITCOMB. GERTRUDE WARE BUNCE, WILLIAM C. ROBINSON.

Probate Committee.

no conunent s not knowaP^ le bad ever ter hU vlaP He was.b" at bis Ik north eo-*

figured la a ring Ho o m : t Thutate'. te. aald thal;

told Cbaa-' ao circuB^

fight for led that "it

ma.)

:wss s /DP(A P > -jn w Natrict At- Qeogkaa a t .I wUck will I kold-oB as well as not ksHwn0 robber}, kt aotlwr- f IntrinsRiii1 first Base.) erime, tbe 1 foUewIng leatiUea af I roles thc}

d o c k z uVPftH M*at *

DERWEARt v

50cU P P E R G A R M E N T

SHOP!

aa# a*iatM •tMiag titti It liJHIlltSMt tSM »tf ll;t

• It u A t n • n tte v PAMOIMlf f t t

SUPREME TRIBUNAL REFUSES TO HEAR

MOONEY’S APPEAL(OMtInned from Page One.)

obtained a review of its contention that the National Labor Relations Board should not be permitted to withdraw litigation involving an order directed against the automo-bile concern. Argiiment was set for November 7.

ford had appealed from a federal Circuit court ruling at Covington. Ky., permitting tbe Board to recall an order directing the company to reinstate 39 employes at Michigan plants. The board wished to amend its procedure.

CJ) The court algo agreed to re-view# a ruling by the I-abor Board that men who strike In connection with a labor dispute retain the status of employes even though un-der contract not to strike. The Board appealed from an adverse ruling by the seventh Circuit court at Chicago In a case Involving the Columbian Enameling and Stampbl

The cut# little kittens who first, roads their appaarancs on Haynas' otreet and later were recognised as polsoats,' evidently have grown up and are ho longer following their mother as she goes .nut at night in search of, food.

Bom under a chicken coop they were unmolested In their early dayd for feat’ of the trouble the mother might start if an effort was made to dislodge them from their home. Daye they remained in their nests under the chicken coop and at night found garbage cans tn the rear of the Manchester Memorial hospital a handy restaurant Tha night flre-

;man saw them k few times, but each time ha gave then Uia right of way.

Thla morning when a cobbler ut810 Majn etreet ariivad at hla place of husinesa be detected a strongodor and was about to pick up this moming'a paper when he discover-ed that tbe paper covered a dead skunk. Tbe proprietor of the pack-age store at 810 1-3 arrived shortly afterwards and also viewed the re-mains. Tha skimk was removed to a burial place.

The big question' now is "Who threw the dead skunk in the door-way and was there a reason in do-ing ao?"

Ing Company, Inc., of Terre Haute, Ind.

(3) llie tribunal consented to re-view a decision by the sixth federal Circuit court denying enforcement of a Labor Board order directing the Band! Manufacturing Company of Cleveland, O., to reinstate employes. It was ruled by the lower court that the company had negotiated with Its employes until they chose shutting down the plant in preference to hir-ing outsiders to work In one depart-ment.

(4) The Memphis Furniture Man-ufacturing Company failed to ob-tain a review of Its contention that Its activities were local and hence the Labor Board had no authority over It. The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld an order directing the reinstatement of 13 employes.

Other Decisions Announced In other actions, the high tribu-

nal:Refused to review the conviction

of Anna Marie Hahn of Cincinnati, under sentence to die In tbe Ohio electric chair for the poison slaying of Jacob Wagner.

Refused to Interfere with thr con-victions of Charles (Lucky) Luci-ano and five others sentenced to long prison terms as members of a New York City vice ring.

Agreed to review a daclaton by the Weatam Missouri Federal Dis-trict Court ordering the return of 8536,000 to commission men gt the Kansas City stockyards. A stay of the lower court decision was grant-ed pending a final decision.

Douglas Fairbanks, motion pic-ture producer, failed to obtain a re-view of a lower court decision that he should pay the federal govern-ment 373,185 additional Income tax for 1937, 1938 and 1929.

Denial of a review means that the decision of the lower court remains In effect. Oral arguments will be heard later on disputes which the Supreme ^ourt agreed to hear.

The Mooney c s m Involved the prisoner's contention that he was convicted by perjured testimony. He also asserted that California of-ficials had ''wilfully and knowingly suppressed" evidence In hts favor.

Ten persona were killed and 40 Injured In the bombing of which Mooney was convicted. Originally, he was sentenced to death but the penalty was reduced at President Wilson's request.

In 1917, tbe Supreme court re-fused to pass on the controversy. After a second appeal. It held on Jan. 31, 1935, that Mooney had not exhaused his legal rights in state courts.

Since then, the California Su-preme court ruled against him In a flve-to-ono decision.

l*onnUtcd Order RoratledIn the Ford case, the Circuit

Court of Appeals at Covington, Ky., had permitted the Board to recall an order directing the company to reinstate employes and to cease In-terference with the self-organisation of workmen.

The Board wanted to adopt new procedure because tbe Supreme court last April 35 had critlsiied procedure followed by Secretary Wallace In ordering a reduction of rates for commlaalon men at the

AB)—Ikr- u roUgfitm

^ hy her Uth M-Cnitefi Lb- lea todaf. be aathor- ) Lothenja ag for fa-

SUCCESSFULPERMANENTS!

It's really qtiiu simple to as-sure jrouraelf a successful penaanent—by preparing for ft tn advance with a few scalp / ' treatmenU that are ao bene-ficial and ao incxpenalve.

Harriett’sB E A U T Y SA LO N

BBfrtett BchaUar Horan, Prop.

129 C eater Street

Teteplume 6824

Open Tuesday! and'

ioradaya To 9 P. IL

By GEORGE HOLMES, Decorative Upholsterer

TO -A L L HOME LOVERSIf your budget is comparatively amaii now, GIVE your LIVING ROOM our inexpensive Beauty treatment.

RE-UPHOLSTERED3-Piece Living Room Suite, stripped to frames, springs retied, new fllling, new felt, new cushions, new BETTER covering.

$49.50 Use Our Budget Other Very Low Prkes

All Work Called For and Delivered.All Work Done In Our Own SUNLIGHT Shop.

AH Orders Completed In A Week Or Less.

VISIT our clean, sunUght shop with plenty of fresh, clean, pure air. No greasy garage. No damp, dark cellar or furnace ashes. No leaky bam. 13 School Street

If You Wish, Just Phone 3615, and' Mr. Holmes Will Can W'ith Samples.

THE LAW PROTECTS YOU We Protect Your Family’s Health!

MANCHESTER UPHOLSTERING CO.

Town’s OMcat and Leading Upholsterer gioca 1922

Kanaa# City etockyarda.Tbe. Supreme court held May 31

that tha L«bor Board could with-draw from the Circuit court at Philadelphia Utlgatton lavdl^big an order directing the RepubUc Steel Corporation to retnitata 5,000 atrlk- Ing employee.

In that caee a transcript of tbe record had not been filed with tbe Circuit court It had been filed tn the Ford ease. The Ford company contended that the Circuit court had obtained jurledictlon of the dis-pute and should proceed to a final decision.

Chargee against the Ford com-pany were filed with the Labor Board by the United Automobile Workers of America, a C. L O. affili-ate.

The Labor Boatt) lost the Colum-bian Enameling case before the Cir-cuit Court at Chicago which held that the employee completely severed the employment relation by striking and ended all obligation of the com-pany to bargain with union repre- entattvee.

At the time the etrlke began In March, 1935, a contract was In ef-fect between the company and unionw sv eMfva u ie tv i iem pires whereby disputes were sub-

------ to arbitration.The Board found that the com-

pany had committed an unfair labor practice by refusing to bargain with

union after passage of the Labor Act—four months efUr the strike began. It ordered 350 strUers re-instated.

The Circuit Court eald the «om- pany had engaged In "an open, defi-ant fiouttng of the law of the land” but that the employes, because of their action, were barred from ob-taining relief against the labor prac-tices.

In the Sands Manufacturing com-pany case, a Circuit Court ruled that the company had “sincerely ailempt- ed over a long period" to negbtlate differences with the Mechanics Edu-cational Society of America and had suspended only after the union had taken action “which In effect was equivalent to a atrlke."

The Labor Board had found that the firm, manufacturers of water heaters, violated the act in 1935 by refusing to bargain with the union. Reinstatement of 48 employes was ordered.

The Memphis Furniture Manufac-turing company waa directed by the Labor Board to reinstate IS em-ployes. The Circuit Court upheld the Board's findings that the com-pany engaged Ih unfair .abo.' prac-tices In discharging workers because of union activities.

Company counsel argued that the labor act did not apply because tha firm's activities did not affect Inter-state commerce.

HAZARDS OF LIFETO BE DECREASED

(Oonttniied from Pegs One.)

and adequately lighted at night, is coming, but these material Improve-ments win avail us little If we can-not teach the man behind the wheel to accept regulations and rcatric- tlons devised for his own welfare, aa well as for the good of others.

"I believe, however, • that we are coming Into a period when a much more thorough checkup of the driv-er’s consistency and sense of soctaJ responsibility will be insisted upon. Pedestrian education ' will receive new emphasis.”

“I believe," he asserted, "that In the next 35 years society, acting through authorized agencies, will have 'the right to go Into the home and demand that ]}ropei protection be provided for children.

'Enormous strides will be made tn Industrial safety. I am oonfldent we shall be able to reach the small employer and get all tbe rank and file to understand the importance of tbe protecUve .tdea. That done, one of the chief problems ih Indus-try will have been solved.

"It may come to paaa In the next 35 years that no manufacturer will think of putting up plant without equipping It with every known safety device applying to working conditions there.

“Admittedly the one non-contro- verclal subject In Industry, safety, doubtless will bring about a better understanding between employer and employie, tbe employer-realising to a greater degree that he is the protector of his employes’ well-be-ing.'* CMmeron asserted new tech-niques would be developed to ellmln- Inate treacherous conditions on thoroughfares In winter.

"At the present Uine,” he said, "no city in the United States Is suf-ficiently organized to clear Its streets and aldewalka Immediately after a^aleet storm or snowstorm. I believe that in the next 25 years we shall reach tbe place where there will be no such thing aa a slip-pery walk or itieeL

"We are approaching the day of the neon street sign and tha end of those markers which cannot be read in the dark and thua cause much loss of time and temper and are not, therefore, without haxard."

At the launching of the safety movement Cameron bad tbe aastst- ance o f only one otenograpber; to-day tha Council staff numbers 130. and 853 peraona earve votuatarUy oa nommlrtaea. Tbe Couadra aoaual

la hatwaan $730JM0 and

Incoranee BfoeksBid

Aetna CasusUty........ 04Aetna Fire ................ 47Aetna Life ................ 384Automobile .............. 20Conn. Oeneral .......... 33Hartford Firs .......... 7fl4Hartford Steam Boiler 40National F ir e ............ 624Phoenix ................... 804Travelera .................. 440

DODGERS RELEASE BURLEIGH GRIMES

Change h Manager For Brooklyn Chib Hehl Ne^ etfsary For Next Year.

Naw York, O ct 10.— (AP)--Oen- eral Managar Lany MaoPhall m tha Brooklyn club callad In rapbrtara to-day to tell them aomfthlng they all knew — that Burleigh Grimes had been released aa manager of tha club. No auccesaor was named though MaePhail aald ha was constdsrtng several candidates, foramoat of whom* wars Leo Durocher, Jimmy WUaon, Charles (Chuck) ‘Drasaan, and Frank Frisch.

"Grimes did hla' bast and evenbrought the club up 13 gamaa higher than 1987,” aald MaePhail, "butfaal a change la naaaasary. We are atlll dickering foi hla auccesaor and expect to announce the new choice within two weeks.”

Grimes, who relieved Casey Sten-gel aa Dodger pilot In 1037, Was noti-fied September 1 to look for another job. MaePhail aald If tha naw Dodgair manager wanted to hire Bur-leigh as coach 't was up to him. Be-yond that, he aald, the club had no liana for Grimes. Burleigh, one of he great pitching stars of yaster-

day, may line up with the Milwaukee club of the American Association.

Durocher, who came to the Dod-gers In a trade with tha St. Louis Cardinals last winter, was regarded as the leading choice to replace Grimes Wilson, who resigned as manager of the Philadelphia PhiUtes, and Frisch, discharged as pilot ofthe Cardinals, also figured they had

th Dreasen, r«i-a chance along wll leaaad at tha and of the '!S7 season aa manager of tha Clnolnnatl Rada. MabPhatl also callad In Wade KUll- far. who managed flacramanto of tha Pacific Coast League thla year.

Local StocksFumlehag by bOIlar and Whitney

43 Paari Stadat Hartford, Osiin.

WUUara B. Btarttn Local Bepraaantativa 1:00 p. ro. Quotattens

Big Flour Shipment,& ),(XX) Barrels, Sent,

To Spain by Rdd CrossTba flfst'sblpaMnt of flour by

Amaricaa Rid Orbaa for dIatrlbuUoa to tha wom#a"1uMl chtl- dran, vletlBia of tu/tXUXm la Spata, want fOrwardXOctobar 8th. Thla cargo, oonatadag of approxtnaauiy fiO.OOO banwa waa aUppad from Hobokan, New Jarsay, on Um "8 . 8. Indspendsnca HaU’ of the America France Una of tha Unltail BUtaa Maritime Oomnalastoa. In arranging thlp project, the Amaiicau Red Cross has had tha oo-operatton of theState Dapartmant and other gov- emnMntal agandaa. The Sour wUl beproc i ssid from wheat mads avau- able to tha RSd Cross by the Fed-eral Surplua CommodiUes Corpora-tion.

Tba Rad Cross will aasuma tha ax- panes of mtlUng tha wheat and traiMporttng tha flour to Um sea-board. Tha MaritiaM Oommiasion will provide free tranaportaUiMi to French ports where tha flour wUI be delivered to repraaantaUves of the

Friends Service Oommlt- tae who will act for tba Ahoarlcan Red Cross la dlatrlbutltig the Sour la Spala. Tba Friuida are wau er-

' gaalaad to give raltaf to dvillaaa in both Loyalist and NaUonsUat Spauu Tbs Friends will racaiva the flour m Franca and arrange tha transship-

I nMht to Spain and dlatribuUte to tha needy there, thua raltevlng tba AnMriean Rad Cross of 'the neoaasl- ty of sanding parsoanal to Spam.

laformaUon available from au- thentle aourcea Indicates that three million people In Spain, chMfly wo-men and children, face atarvaUon during the coming winter unleea re-lief can be provided. The ptoaent eooperaUva effort anablaa all Amen-

DRIVING CONTEST ) BE HELD IN STA1

Manufactiirers And B m e tt Leaders To Co-operate h Cottiiif Down

,Nnmber Of Accidents.

Company, Hartford; Albert VuiUau- mler. New Departure DIvUion, Gen-eral Motors CorporaUon, Bristol; Ex-offido, Saipuel H. Flaber, Cbair- man. Highway Safety Commlaalon

CZECHS TO SEEK AMERICAN LOANS

Hitler Central Figure 1161H ANNIVERSARY O f New Religious M ove OF KEMP’S STORE

eana again to parUdpata Inof good will toward

n MDulation undergoing in- auffarlng,

preaslen alviUan

hnd makoa~possible a large measure of relief at ! ooet which doea not place too great a burden on the resources of the Red Cross.

N. Y. Stocks

Public DUIItles

Asked934935H8125784S3fi4H824

430

Adams Bhtp . . Air Reduc . . . . Alaska Jun , . . Allegheny . . . Allied Chem . .Am Can ........Am Home Prod Am Rad 8t 8 Am Smelt . . . . Am Tel and Tsl Am Tob B Am Wj

idaArjdour 111 . . .

ison . . . . Aviation Corp

dwln. a t .. Balt and OhioBendix ..........Seth Steel . . . . Bath Btael. pfdBorden ..........Can P a c ..........Case (J. 1.) . . Cerro De Pas .

jCIfea and Ohio ; Chrysler . . 4 Coca Cola . . . . Col Cas and El Coml Inv Tr

5048595530

14337

24428437 4 4

38 54 17

Cbnb. L t and PowC^nn. Pow...................Hartford Elec. Lt. . . . Illuminating Sha. . . .Hartford Gas ............So. New EMg. Tel. Co.Western Mass.............

IndustrialsAcme Wire ................Am. Hardware..........Arrow H and H, C^m.Billings and Spencer.Bristol Brass ............Colt's PaL Firearms.Eagle Lock ................Fafnir Bearings........ 85Gray Tel Pay StaUon 9 4 Hart and (^ I s y . . . . 185 Hendey Mach., B. . . . 10Landers, Frary Ot Clk. 26 New Brit Mcb., Com. 244

do., pfd..................... 90North and Ju d d ........ 34Peck, Stow h .WUeox 7 4Russell Mfg. Co.......... 29Scovlll Mfg. Co........... 24Sllex Go....................... 12%Stanley W ork s.......... 41

do., pfd. .................. 374Torrington .............. 34Veeder Root .............. 48

New York Banks

5445316734

14829

2748043964

415819

1 1 4

1238264

339 4

S3331444829423SO

Bank of New York Bankers Trust .. Central HanoverChase ................Chemical ........City .Continental . . . . Com Exchange . First NaU^^I .. GuaranW Trust . Irving 'Trust . .Manufhet Trust Manhattan . . . .N Y T ru st..........Public NaUonal . TiUa Guarantee U. 4 ........

. 855

. 454

. 85

. 33 4

. 44 4

. 35 4

. IS

. 501630

. 340

. 1 1

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. 17

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. 28

. 8 41050

8704 74888444642741552

1380350IS411983SO« 4

1600

1932 LOSERS SEEK SENATE COMEBACK

(OMttaued from Page )

landslide, la trying for the Senate seat which he lost In 1933 to Senator Pat McCarran, Democrat MfCar- ran, like Gillette, was a DemocraUe opponent of the Supreme Court Re- organixaUoo bill. He won renomlBa- tlon handily.

New Jeraeyttea Aloe TryingThe third o f the Republicans

working for Senatorial comebacks Is W. Warren Barbour In New Jersey. Barbour went out in 1983.

William H. J. Ely, Democratic nominee, calls UmMlf a 100 per cent New Dealer and Mys Bartwur ia a

money bag." Barbour says be wanta tn enecurage buaineee with-out assuming the role o f a rea,etl0ii- ary critic.

A famouB RepubUoca name ebowa up in Ohlo where Robert A. Taft la running against Senator • Bulkley, Democrat who gained a kind word from President Rooaevelt last aum-

Taft la a son of the one thne preaident and chief justice.

In another Ohio race, Cbaatar C. Bolton is trying to regain hie old

in Um House Of Reprenaatn- Uven. He kwt It la US3. T M wna the panr Boltas worn rhetrwuw e f

OSMDMMBRil

Coml S o lv ................................... 1 0 4Cons Edison ............................... 294CoiM Oil 3 4Coht Can 45Com Prod .................................. 70Del Lack and W est............... 7HD ou g ^ A ircra ft........................0 0 4Du Pont ................................... 148Eastman Kodak ..........ESec Auto Llta ................Gen Blae .............................Gen Foods *........................Osn M otors.......................OlUstts ...........................Hscksr Prod P rod ............Hudson M otors..................Int Harv ..................................... 644Int N ick ...................... 534Int Tel and T e l ....................... 104Johns ManvUle..........................108Kennecott ................................ 48Lehigh Val Rd ......................... 5 4Ltgg and Myers B .................. 1014Loew's ..................................... 5 4 4Lorillard ................................. 304Mont W a rd ........................ 614Nash Kslv 10Nat Blsc ................................... 35Nat Cash R e g ............................364

883 4 48644 9 4

9 48 49 4

Net Dairy Nat DletUl N Y Central NY NH end North Am . . . Packard Param Piet . .Penn ..........Phelps Dodge PhU Pete . . . Pub Serv N J

H

4 430420 4

1 432 43

1 2 42344 0 488814

Radio ......................................... 8Reading 174Rem Rand 13Republic. Steel ....................... 194Rey Tob B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44Safeway S tores......................18Bchenley D la ..................... . 194Sears Roebuck....................... 784

El

SbeU TAilon Socoay Vac South Pac .South Rwy St Brands St Gas andSt on 6 a l .......... .St OU N J .......... .Tex C o rp ............ .Hmken Roll Bear Trans America . .Unlen Carbide . .Union P a c .......... -Unit Aircraft . . . .Unit Corp ..*•••<Unit Gas Imp U 8 Rubber XT 8 Smelt XI 8 SteelVick Chem ..............iVesteni UnionWest E) and Mfg ..................Woefiworth .........................Else Bond and Share (Curb)

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ITALY HOPEFUl B R I T A I N ^ W H l APPROVE ACCORD ^(Conttnned frem,Pag0 Ons)

dealrea a more eomplats retirement of Italian forces in Spain, while Premier Mussolini feels Franco atlll reqnirea services of Fascist aviation. Some well Informed Faaelsta beUsve a oompromlas settlement has been nwde difficult by critics o f Prime Minister Chamberlain* of Britain, who contend he ellready yielded too much to the dictators at Munich. i

Freab-water apongei are found growing la Streams as far west aa

Ward E. KrauseInstructor

CLARINET AND SAXAPHONE

Studio,87 Walnut St

Tel 5336

tlARIIOtU)

S T A T ET(H>AY

TxnauiATWEDNESDAY

TONIGHT

THE NEW

CIRCUSOLD FASHIONED COUNTRY STORE

FREE! FREE!BOCEBIES, CANNED - GOODS, HAMS, VtO .' "

O N-BOMANCE o r THE UMBEBLOST** With

Jean Parker Erie LIndex — ALSO —

*WANTED BY POUCE* WItk

Frankto Derre, BobertKeeS A MOVIE QUIZ HXTt

TOMORROW and THURS.

SUPER GIANT SHOW NIGHT

A OBAND'FOUB HOUB MOVIE QUIZ HIT SHOW!

PLUBt C O M E D m , CABTOONS. NOVMfTnPS

ENUMERATORS MAEING THEIR ANNUAL ROUNDS

¥

A group of prominent manufac-turers and other business leaders, with the support of OoveraOT Cross end the Highway Safety Commla- rion, has organized a Safe Driving Contest among officers and em-

, ployeca of Connecticut concerns. Safety for aU users of tbe highways is the immedUte objecUve, but the sponsors hope the plan will result in conditions before and after the whistle blows aa safe as now exist during working hours in plants and ofiffoes.

The contest, which will be con-ducted by each concern separately, for the present at least, is to run for one year, beginning November 1, but there will be two periods of competition for prises, from Novem-ber 1, 1938 to April 80. 1939, and from May 1 , 1939 to October 31.

( 1939.To Offer Prixee

Three or more subetentlal prizes ape to be offered by each concern, and awarded at the end of each s|x months’ period. In addition, all the first prize winners will be given a certificate signed by tbe governor,

• and every contestant .who completes the full year without an accident and without a conviction for viola- tien o f any motor vehicle law, wtu be given a card on which his record for the year will be certified by tbe Chairman of the Highway Safety Commission and by the Commis-sioner of Motor Vehicles. This wlU be In convenient sise so that it may bs carried with the driver’s license.

Dudley 8. Ingraham of Bristol, vice-president of the E. Ingraham Company, la Chairman of tbe Indus' trial Safsty Committee of tbe High way Safety Oommiasion which Is In charge of tbe contest. Thla commit-tee plans to increase the scope of the contest. If there Is sufficient In-terest.

If a large number of concerns in any town or city enter, an intra- clty contest may be arranged. Should several such city groups be formem indicating the possibility of Inter-cIty rivalry, a State award nsay be made for the best town or city record.

Letters announcing tbe details of the contest were sent Saturday to about twelve hundred manufactur-ing companies and other concenu, cncloelng general rules which may be modified to fit the conditions ot any plant or business. The concerns ragitesrlng are to bs divided accord-ing to the number of employees from each company in the contest. "Hm committee suggests that the principal awards be prises ot gaso- Un*. nnd that the priM be awarded 01) the baata of mileage operated by the car of the employee, freedpml from accident and freedom for con-viction of any violation.

General Rales Members o f tbe famUy of the con-

testant and others wiU also be in therantest. In a sense, as actually It win bs the record of the contes-tant's car which wlU count toward tbe award, so far aa mUeage la con-cerned.The general rules atate that “in this contest, all accldente wtu be considered, whether or not the driver of the car entered In the omt- test la responsible for the accident, and regardles of who is the driimr, except, however, thaF accident to a car, when such car is legally and properly parked, shall not be In- dudsd.”

It la) planned to set up n commit-tee In each concern, including one officer and three employees, and each contestant must agree to abide by the final decision of tbs oommlt- t ^ Should n controversy arise, the company committee will rsaerve the right check CO the accident and enforcement record of Un contes-tant with the Department of Motor Vehicles or any other agency.

Companies entering Uie contest a|ao agree that in case a prise

sfrould be won by a oar of sn cxecu- ttvis of the company, or by a com- jMny-owned ear, only the gover- hor’B certificate will be awarded, and. tbe gasoline prise will be rnrsfd oh to the next most eligible ' oon- teiiUht Companies may mans QMcial rules governing salesmen

. and others who normally might be expected to drive much more than

-the ordinary shop or office em-ployee.

DIstrtbvUng Peiate Vnrimja local sonnufacturlng aa-

sodnUods and Chambers of Com-merce have volunteered to act ns distributing points la their locahtMs for printed rules of the contest, and other material, nad nlno to g ^ in-formation on Um details. A list ot Ums s distributing points is to be mads nvntlnUa to all eooesms.

Any company not rscelvlDg de- tnllad Information of'the contest Iqr mnU may apply to tbe Blgkway Sa y y Oommlssico or to the Maau- fhetursrs AasodaUen of OoanecU- out. and complete tatformation will bs supplied.» The members of the coaimittes in cfiaiS* are as foOowa: Dudley B. Yhgraham, U m E. Ingraham Com- P y y - Chairman; James A.BuriMak, ‘m velm s li)«nrsncs Com-pany. Hartford; Alfred W. Burg. Tbs TOrringtoo Company, Torring-ton; F. W. Otlbsrt, A- a Gilbert Cpm psay .N tm NavsR: Osorgs 8. *la*l4F> W dgsfort Oaa and U sbt Oompaw. Brt^rqmrt: Jamea W. »M k . Geometric Tool Company.

Havens M. 8. Uttls. Stgourney ^ Company, Hartford: .Walter. 8. Fains. Ateaa U fo Inaoraaos fsnr"-

maaiey Wocka. ; ’ M «v SMum*

Act Under Statnte To Secure List Of Thoae Liable For Old Age Tax Payment.

Acting in accordance with the general statutes, which call for an annual reglstraUon and listing of aU persons In each of tbU state's towns who are eligible to pay an old age asUtance tax, the Manches-ter enumerators, under direction of CDarence Turklngton, todsy be-gan to make tha rounds in the southeastern part of town In the vicinity of Main and Charfor Oak streets. Members of the commit-tee making the enumeraUon, as ap-pointed by the Board of Selectmen are, besldea Turkington. Sedrick J. Straugban. Arthur .".»atlng. Thomas McCann, Leater Macintosh, Edward C. Llthwin and Harold Symington,

These men have authority under law to request taxing informaUon. and the statutes proride penalUes for anyoqe who withholds, or falsl- fles InformaUon given to any can-vasser. It Is understood that some persons, not understanding the na-ture of the survey, have refused to answer quesUons concerning ages of persons In their households.

Certain persona are exempted from paying old age taxes, these In- clutUng persona bom before October 1, 1877, or those bom after October 1,1917, disabled veterans, and a few other classes. The annual old age tax Is 88.

SAYS YOUTH CONGRESS COMMUNIST DOMINATED

Printe Indnstry Turns To-ward United States For RebnOding CapHaL

By DEWITT MACKENZIE Associated Press Forelga Affairs

Writer

vfallen Into the custom of starting off va quotaUon from HiUer with "thus spake the Ftiehrer." The dally pa-

I pars frequently print one of bis say- I Inga at tbe top of the fremt page as the great thought of tbo day. This

Berlin. Get 10.—Nazi Leader Hit-ler Is riding the crest of at wave of [ — -wuubul u* uiv o«y. ims popular aduIaUon which In w n y in- tekee the place of the customary stances a i.nro.rh i words of wisdom from the Bible or

Vitkovlce, Czechoslovakia, Oct. 10 —(AP) —.Czechoslovakia’s private Industry, threatened with exUncUon as a result of the repubUc’a dismem-berment, turned toward the United States today for capital to rebuild plants and railways.

Industrial leaders said they bopt^ especially to obtain loans in the United States—either public or pri-vate—to build railways and high- waya through Czech territory to re-place lines and roads now cut by German and PoUah areas.

They also hoped to Increase ex-port business with the United SUtes to obtain the foreign exchange necessary to pay for imports of coal and sand from mines formerly In CzechoslovaHla but now Included In areas occupied by Germany and Poland.

Faces Forced Shutdown The great Vitkovlce Iron and steel

works, the largest In Czechoslo-vakia, faces a forced shutdown since tbe coal mines which supplied It have been taken away.

Officials said approximately 60 per cent of the hard coal production of the Moravska Ostrava mines was lost by Nvislon of the frontier. The revision also gave Germany and Po-land 90 per cent of tbe republic's soft coal.

The ore situation Is not ao im-portant since most of tUe raw ma-terials for Iron and steel production already were being Imported.

Tbe 110,000,000 ($50,000,000) loan which Great Britain has promised waa characterized both publicly and privately aa only "a drop In the bucket” for what will be needed for the reconatruettva program.

Albany, N. Y., Oct. 10.— (AP) — The second World Youth Congress, held recently at Vaasar college, Poughkeepsie, was “under the dom-ination of, atheistic Communism,'' says Monaignor Edward J. Magtnn, vicar general of the Albany Catho-lic diocese.

"It was a congress of confusion and despair,” Mgr. Maginn asserted in an address at the annual educa-tional demonstration by Albany pa-rochial school children yerierday.

"Under the domination of atheis-tic Communism, those who called thenoselves repreaentatlves of tbe youth of the world were deaf to the only voice that could still their fears

Czechoslovakia’s present debt to the United States amounts to near-ly 1200,000,000. The prindpal Item is the post-war relief debt of 8165,- 658,603, which Is in default Fur-ther Indebtedness of the Cxecho- slovak government and municipal-ities to American bond holders to-uts 833,888,000.

PEACE INDICATION.

stances approaches worship.1 reported that fact previously

and will now amplify It.It is no myth that a new concept

of almost reUglous aspect has been bom In Germany and that Hitler la the centra) figure.

The buildup M largely by Indirec-tion, but it ia Intense. Constantly It is being driven home to the people that tbeir leader Is infallible. He can do no wrong and think no wrong.

PubUc people avoid direct refer-ence to the subject for it is a deli-cate proposition as yet. Germany Is a strongly Christian country. A high government official, however, con-firmed to a close friend of n)lne that Hitler la establishing a new faith. Der Fuehrer himself has remarked that every 2000 years a fresh re-ligion springs up and has made It dear that he believes he was or-dained to lead tbe German people.

There are In Germany three cas ties built In medieval style, where future Nasi leaders are being trained. The schooling is rigorous and calls for great devotion and self sacrifice.

Tower Of W Mom SymboUoAt part of one of these castles t.s

a symbolic structure known as tbe tower of wisdom. It Is said that when Hitler went there to dedicate tbe school and tower he told the stu- dente he was writing a work which would comprise bis Ideas. This would be banded over for the bene-fit of future Nazi leadership. It would be a sequel to his autobi-ography "Mein Kampf."

When thla statement became known It waa whispered that the Fuehrer was wriUng a Bible for the people. As It may, even now Mein Kampf Is read on occaalona from some church pulpits in place of the scripturea In certain parts of the country, too, one sees death notices saying that the deceased "died in the faith of Adolf HiUer" Instead 6f the usual scriptural quotation.

More and more the Fuehrer Is employing Mohammed like expres-sions in his public utteranoea He speaks In the language of the prophets. These sayings are care-fully preserved and cultivated.

Great Thought Of DayNewspapers and speakers have

London, O ct 10.—(AP) —Britalr. today saw in tbe decision of King George and Queen Elisabeth to visit Canada next summer an indicaUon of government confidence the Euro-pean situation would remain peace-ful for at least six months.

some historic personage of the past This new movement, by the way,

has qothlng to do with the nco Paganism which has sprung up in restricted quarters In Germany. The Nazi Idea Is in some respects like the Shintoism of Japan which calls for ancestor worship and is built about the divinity of the naUon's ruler.

Thc Nasi movement glorifies the German as a superman- He talks direct with Heaven. Above the or-dinary nm of Germane stands the great twentieth century prophet Adolf Hitler. In HiUer's spiritual

Sale Begins Tomorrow And Will Continne For The Rest Of The Month.

leadership lies his strongest hold on l i e . ................................the peopfe. It follows'that Nazi-

dom’s greatest strength Is here.There Is no smallest doubt that

tbe German people aa a whole would have followed Hitler Into war over the Sudeten conflict bad he called them. They definitely didn't want war but they would not have chal-lenged the edjet of their leader.

NASH-KEVINATOR ENDS DISPUTE WITH UBOR

Kemp's Steteenth Anniversary Sale begins tomorrow, according ta an announcement appearing In to-day’s Herald. The complete stock of furniture and household furnish-ings arc Included In the sale. Hav-ing a reputation for carrying only high grade furniture, the Sixteenth Anniversary Sale Is expected to bring many people Into the store to see the values offered at extra low prices. Living room suites, dining room suites, maple, mahog-any ami walnut bedroom suites, kitchen sct.s. chairs, rugs, tables, mirrors, bookca.-ws, lamps, studio couches, desks and many other household Items are Included In the sale.

The First Store.Opening their store sixteen yeairs

ago tn the Jbhnson block under the name of Kemp's Music House, the first store was a complete music store. "Everything Musleal” was the slogan which sold everything from pianos to kazoos. After one year in their first store It was nec-essary to move to larger quarters to taka care of the Increasing de-mand for musical merchandise.

In 1926 the present store waa erected and other lines of merchan-dise were added to tl)e stock. Since then the store has built up a large clientele which has repeatedly re-turned to moke Kemp's Its head-' quarters for fine hou.schold furnish-ings. ,

Today Kemp’s, Incorporated, han-dle a complete line of'houschold fur-nishings, and handle such well known lines aa Frlgldalre. Bendix Home Laund'ry. Mayt.ig Washer, P. IIco, RCA nnd Halsbn radios, Sim-mons and Red Cross mattresses and Crawford ranges.

Thc Sixteenth Anniversary Sale will begin tomorrow and continue throughout the month of October.

Doable Qnartei To F w ie l* cal Selecttona At MeatlBK ^ Bmanoel Clntreh Groop.

A double quartet rfom *1m I of Admlnlstratton <rf the Ike Lutheran church wfl] fumMt' sosai selecUons at the monthly masttwM the Brotherhood of the ch u iA ^ S morrow night at 8 o’clook. 1 4 3 *!

Is In cl------ -----------------program lain charge of Evald Brisk* son and . hla Personnel committee. >

Rev. K. E. Erickson will bs thr’ speaker, A abort bustoesB ssa will precede the entertalmnant refreshments \riU bs served.

Farm experts o f Arghaatstaa: India and Moscow are trytag %# cbeck breeding and migrirtloa of ' locusts with consequent heavy daav age to crope.

CASH AND CARRY SPECIAL

Racine. Wts., Oct. 10. — (AP) — Maintenance men In the Nash-Kelvl- nator Corp. motor plants here and at Kenosha were called to work today by R. A. DeVlieg, general works manager, following acceptance of terms reached here last night to ap-parently end a labor dispute which at Its peak affected nearly 7,000 em-ployee.

The dispute began after the cor-poration shut down Its Racine plant Aug. 22. announcing Intention of transferring equipment to Kenosha. The company closed ite Kenosha and MUwaukee plants Sept. 27 because. It asserted, of inability to get parts.

By the agreemeiit. It was report^ unoflicially, the Racine plant would continue to operate for a time aa a parts plant, with gradual transfers to Kenosha.

Chief fuel for the dispute was seniority rtghti to be given Racine workmen at Kenosha. Last nlghCe agreement reportedly Included a new seniority arrangement.

Do Thb If You’ro

NERVOUSCARD

TABLES

'sszewv|fruTVD LiTQlB X,. r i n R M a

Vo^tsMo Compoutid, •oportoOw /or vomom froffl wholoooiM borb« Bad roou.

U t l^ k h s m 'a C «m p<nia 4 M p bu lM o p -lo rn p h n im i ra d sU n r* a a d thua a id Ip

S'® '*•» Iwmaid iB

h.siS7i;“A'SB;7'dCrS:“aa™‘3 . ' ' Kworth UTtBg.F<w o n r M ym n ena wnnsa haa loM

MUST l^"B'5S0Df

ON SALE TILL WEDNESDAY NOON

K €€P V O U R € V € O H

8 PE 0 1 A L

I n n e r a p r i n gM A T T R E S S

» 1 2 - 9 5

KEMP'S

^ W s( V l M l I k l l l ^ S ch o o l

M o n c h o 8 t o r ,C o M b

39th A n n i v e r s a r y S a l eNOW GOING ON

and give them hope.ilik•They were unlike you In this,"

Mgr. Maginn told bis audience: "They had not your heritage .of faith."

BRITISH START NEW DRIVE IN PALESTINE

Jerusalem, Oct. 10.— (A P)—Brit-ish armed forces In Palestine under-took today a new and mighty drive to stamp out terrorism.

The home government ordered re-inforcements for the campaign suf-ficient to bring to 21,000 the approx-imate total of BriUr.b soldiers and police In tbe Holy Land.

Britishers here saw In this sn Indication all resources of the em-pire would be put behind a drasUc driye to halt the Arab-Jewisb strife which flared July 3. 1937, when a British Royal Commission recom-mended partition of Palestine Into Arab, Jewish and British-mandated areas.

Five persona were killed and 11 Injured seriously Saturday and Sunday, and the death toll for the past year haa mounted Into the hun-dreds.

CLASSESIN

ARTS AND CRAFTSFor ChUdiea and Adnlta

PAINTING SKETCHINO FINGER PAINTING FRESCOL BLOCK PBC-mNO LEATHER TOOUNO CLAY MODELLING MARIONETTES MASQUES WOOD CABVINO

MISS RUSSELL’S STUDIO WORKSHOP

Cheney BMg., 988 Main 8 tFor Farther Details

Deaths Last Night

^ NewtonMUte 55, a lawyer whose hobby de- vrimicd into a technical knowledge which bad ao Important Influence, on the American football gem« Players at many big colleges were teught hla style of klcklhg a foot- deIL

WUitamsport. Pa.—bietri«b La- made. 79, preaident and pubUaher of tha Winiamaport Grit, which be buUt up from a smaU town news-paper into a sleekly with a national circulation.

G . E.W IL L IS

& S O N , Inc.• COAL• COKE• FUEL OILS• RIIII.DING SUPPLIES• MASONS’ SUPPl.IES• CEMENT AND

PI-ASTER• FLUE and DRAINAGE

TILE• NORFOLK PAINT• HARDWARE

2 Main Street TcL 5125

THERE $ NO POINTCOCKBR SfA N IB L

Spsnyell (m ijg dott t back to lj$6w Cbeker it •mallctt of family. A veiy popular pure-bred dog- - - - - - - - - - - - prwprieawe |rws«'W 4C«J aiVg

in U. S. Standard oolort ranfc from aolid blacka, rtdi, to ihadea of cream; liver red and combina- tiont. VeiMiile, can be trained into retriever, O tttt lover of human family.

HE’S 6IVIN 6 HIS

NERVES A REST

. . . A N D S O IS 'H E

Ha v e jrou noticed how a dog, in the m id« o f play, suddenly jiops and

restjf Hit nerve syttem—ss complicated and high-ttning aa our own—haa signalled di*t it’t time fo rtlax! Man, unfortunately, is less senaitiye to the warnings o f hit nerves. Though nerves may need a restful pause, we are inclined to preat on in our absorbing tasks—relentlessly—forgetful of mounting nerve strain. When we find our-selves tense, irriuble,' upset, we may not

t'^cn realize why. Don’t let tension tie your nervea in a knot. Make i(v o u r pleasant rule to break nerve tensiorroften through the d a y -T O LET U P -L IG H T UP A CAMEL! Feel how gratefully nerves wel-come the mellpw intermission that your nearby package o f Camels suggests. And not only do smokert find Camel’s tostlier tobaccos toothing to the nerves—but mild- rt, too—ripe-rich in flavor—completely en-joyable from tviry angle!

M illions o f people who live happily

LET UP^ LIGHT UP A CAMELFLAGSHIP PILOT. Captain Walter J. Hunter of American Airlines, speaks for his profeuion when "* “ Ragged rienws and flying don’t mix. I head off nerve tentiai by giving ray nerves regular rcsu--l let up and light up a Camel. I find Camels soothing to thc nerves."

vV IL tU T mSHmA L '

W A TERPR O O FN N I ff

V A U t. T

Naturally, You Want the Best

^lUt bjr Ebaora, Uia Nwwalk uid Wilbert borial vaoHs are tady m - eordlng to Uie highest standards. There are no finer'prodaets. ’ They cost Uttle If anything more than other vanits.

25th Year o f Serviea

o f Worldwide Repirtation

E L M O R E d k C O i M P d j f T

P IP you KNO W :—that the grower of tobacco also cures it—in many cases, in bams equipped to apply heat without smoke f "rhat tte planttf wbrin dajf apd night until thc curing proc-ess ia completed f Selection of Camel’s tobaccos requires tte services of men familiar with every phase of grow-ing caring, end aging

,_____, ehoies tobac^ It is weU,itnown in the tobacco trade that* Camel cigarettes

m o r e e x p e nSIVE TOBACCOS—'Turkish and Domestic.

I b e n ? ^ g q o d m a n - x i m i swws.l.tWwM4".SrMMAwiMW.S-M(kTwWev

S iZ c .m 'T i •"—‘M-C.hmbl.Nwwork.fcJOp.B.S.T,M sm C.a.T..a*saM .a.T..7illsair.S.T. I k»saCJ.T,Ti}OsaMA.T,iJO,0 PA.T.

"tUSH AUIONMENT9. deadlines, phone calls would wreck roy nerves,” uyt New 'York newspaper woman Estelle Karon, "if 1 didn’t pause frequently. I let up often end light up a CamcL Ciamels soothe my nervet. I work better—get more fun."

UP A C A M EL!

Tbe A sMltle3

.eg ell m

, All r •sselal 4

Pen SI

Peblici iuUee M Tork. a

MEUBOUtCUL

TIm Hi

*sv tePei flvertlea roaitts

MC

8PE

Aat

^from 'blgge fWione;ifo ftJ ; profit

ITu leant

lest

ztil

ner

floi

Page 3: RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR 'LIES' ABOUT AIR ...

/ r,

''AM ro\m£1.

MANCHESTER EVEI^INO HERALD. MANCHESTER, OONN^ MONDAY, OCTOBER 10,198S

j6md|fitfr g ttmfam 9»niUi

_ c&SS*?, imo.u , mmuu tlMMliMl#l» 0

n m u B r t t o i

« i HMMliMtor, Otfia, M

Tb* AMMtalcd Piwk* la asoluaivaly «Mltla4 t« tlM OM « f rapabllaallaa •C all aitMtahaa era4ltaa U It

•tbarwiaa artdltaa la ' tbls aaaar a*4 aMa tba hiaal nttra bab- nnaa barala.

All riabta of rapiabltoatloDa a* taaelal diaaatabtt barala ara alae ra-

^all aarataa allaat a( M. ■. A. tara*

___ btr Aararlaaa Nawaaaaar Fab-uabara Aaaaelatlon.

ibibllabara RapraaanUtlvaa: Tba luUaa Matbawa dpaclal Ataaaa—Na« Tarb. Cblaaaro. Oatroll aaA BoataR.

^ lOOIBJIll A0DIT BDIIBAO OT ' antcin^TioNA

Tba BaraM Prlallaa Oeapaay laa,iiaiflaanalal raaponalbUlla

Car traagrapblaal arrara apaabrlai la llaBabaatataiaartlwtaaata M

l^Saw las BaraM

UONDAT, OCTOBER 10'

s p e a k in C o p p l a n s

3N .1

IHor alx yaara Um natloiiAl Rapub- Sean party Jiaa baaa halpleaa ba>

oCaiiaa It had no plan for recovery jdAiid had to rely en cnUcism of tha ^ e w Deal for tha lattai'a cnormoua

and extravagant expcri- tation. Neither four yeara nor yaara ago did that crlUelani

I the O. O. P. anything at all, ail tha Democrata had to

waa, <*WeU, what do you pro-to do Inataad of what tba New la doing? What’a your plan?" there waa no anawer.

thia year Judge Baldwin haa ipted the well known Tankee

of anawertng a queetlon with a n.

But

tck I

And

Speaking of plana, he aaya in ef- ct, where'a your own plan for

the unemployment prob- )? Tou’va had avarythihg your

way for nearly alx yeara now there are tea million people out

' Joba. What, pray tall ua, la your Intention—your own recipe for

feaanaaa?

ao far aa we can aee ^ e crate won't bo any batter able

anawer that qtieatlon thIa year the Republlcana were four ago. On the contrary, the

Deal haa Juat about played out I atring o f experiineata and thore’a ily one obvloua alternative left,

from tha utterly hopeleaa de- ence, on which It haa leaned

from the beginning, of more and

autt haa not been happy from the aaoment the propoeal waa promul' gated, and recently the altuatlon baa been developing Into what it ia but alight exaggeration to deacribe aa civil war tietween the Araba and Jewa,

Now Britain baa ordered more troopa to Paleatine and lt,Jff., an- hount«d at London that the diaor- dera In the Holy Land will be put down with an Iron hand before Brit-ain will r/Hi|ient to dlecuaa any terma of ultimate aettlement. Since there ia no record of any lighting between Brltlah troopa and Jewa, but many Inatancea of conlllcta be-tween Britaln'a aoldlera and Araba, It Would aeem to be Indicated that thlf means that the Araba are^ .to get a beating up.

But there la another factor In the altuatlon—the dual factor of Hitler and Muaaollnl. At Numberg Hitler declared that the Arabs In the Holy Land had been left helpleaa and In the lurch, and recently an Arab spokesman gloated that, "Now wo are not without friends In Riirope:- our ultimate success as a nation lies In the hand.s of Hitler and Mus- aollnl and not Britain and France."

So the Arabs are hailing the Ber- Iln-Rome axis autocrats as their "hope" and, In view of the ^ents of the lairt fortnight, It Is not surpris-ing that the Palestine Arabs are ready and eager to nght the British army, since they <lo not expect to fight alone.

Perhaps the time will eome when they won’t have to. Neither Hit-ler nor Mutaollnl will be likely to rest content with any real entrench-ment of British power In that little ■trip of Rast-M^lterraifpan litoral which has b««n fought over for thousands of years because of Us value ae an avenue of trade and Ita ■trategie value. But it Is highly Improbable that either will come to the rescue of the Arabs at this time—whkh Is not ripe, Tha^they will not continue to egg on the Arabs Into keeping Palestine In a state of unrest and political flux, however, le Just ae Improbable. Bo Britain la likely to have plenty of trouble In the Holy Land for a good while to come. And It is a kind of trouble which Is eure to result In a tremendous amount of expense without any financial return at all.

In which Mr. Chamberlain Is go-ing to get anything hut help from his new friend A<lolf.

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, MANCHESTER. OONN„ MONDAY, OCTOBER 10,198»

statement declaring that the old city hall gang Is still In the saddle ■ad ^y broad laference in^catlng that decent Democrats In Water- bury Should bolt the ticket.

"Wa are going to clean up this situation here if we have to wreck the Democratic party In the state to do I t "

That Is what candid Democrats In Waterbury—where they ought, to khbw—think of . the link between the Hayes type of politics and the Democratic party. They appear to have a quite different sense of their responslbtlitles—and of the respon- siblllty of their party for what went on In this state under the wing of the Cross administration—than our good Governor has displayed.

splinter t renebes.cbemaaks and

AURORA AND WAR.S

bigger pump-priming with bank.Bicsiey borrowed at etiormoua cost \to future genaratlone and at vast :proflt to the great banks.

That alternative le war—or at least war preparatkm.

Wara and war scares have always been the recourse of governments that didn't know how to solve their economic problems. The unemploy-ed can always be sopped up by armies and navlee; the manufacture of armaments can always set the wheels of Industry to spinning over-time; bllllone of money can always be turned Into the channels of trade; wages and profits can alsvaye be Jacked up—and utterly devas-tating taxes can be Imposed end collected without protest. If the peo-ple can only be frightened Into ■ war or Into pallid fear of sear.

That’s the svay the British Con-servatives .have svorked It for the last three j-eare—and handsomely won a general election In the proc-ess. Thst is, conceivably, the way Mr. Roosevelt will svork It—If he can’t think up something else bet-ter thati more borrowing for mnri pump-priming and t ^ piling up of still more ovetposi^ng deficits.

Juiiga Baldwin^»~qu£stlon le perti-nent Indeed.

Grant that the Republican party has no convincing plan of ita o ut i for providing employment for many mtUtona of people more than In- thistry and general business can use under the nation’s present capacity flor oonsumption—why should It

' to having that failingIfcrown la its face by a party which Bttt only is equally without plan lint which Is administering its one li»rtT>w-and-epend trick in an out-

ualy wasteful manner and in it of rank sectional fawriUsm ithout demanding to know re the New Deal iets off, talk- about plana?

THAT RO,«JE /THORNThe man before whose military

might and ruthle.><snrso all Europe is bowed aa It never l>owed before the legions of Caesar or the power of Napoleon, who has b<'come the pereonifleation of a Mara modern-ised and hurling death from Invin-cible eky bomlM-rs and unmatchablc howitxers, la the .same man who re-ceived a tiny aoratrh from a r»i."ie thorn—and In panic fright In.itantly ordere<I that no one m\iat be per- mltteil to have flowers anywhere within throwliiK distance of his physical presence, lest by a bil-lionth chanee another thorn, or maybe the edge of a petal, might injure an eye.

Hitler U the first of the world’s mighty warriors to be scared stiff by a thrown flower, though there have been several of hl^ bombaatle Ilk who have takeifnotable care of their own hides while grandly iacrlflclng the Uvea of millions to their Ineane vanity.

However. It le Juat possible that Herr Hitler, scratched by a flower, may have been at the same time touched by an Idea. While he haa never been In wild Africa nor up the valley of the A mason it la prob-able that he has read or heard of blowguns and thorn tipped darts dipped In venom the slightest wound from which may produce a'quick and painful demise. And Just sup-pose one of hts devoted subjects should mutter up sufficient courage o. telf-expresplon to hit Adolf with a bunch of roses the prickers of which ha<i been nicely treated with something calculated fo send him burring straight to Valhalla.

Perhaps, after all. Hitler Is smart as well as tlnald. Perhaps the wee Friday accident might have sug-gested the poisoned thorn Idea to somebody—to a lot of somelxxlles In Germany who know well enough where Hitler Is steering them.

The Bad thing Is that It didn’t ■uggeet Itself beforehand to the fel-low—or maybe the girl—who threw that partlctilar Friday rose.

--------------------

More or less learned discussion of the aurora borealla, stimulated by several remarkable displays of the mysterious northern lights that, after all, nobody knows anything about, whlrh we have read recently have neglected lo mention' what may or may not^be true— that such out-of - the - ordinary occurrences hnvc taken place at about the time of the beginning of many of the world’s greatest wars.

There were almost terrifying manifestations of the phenomenon In the early part of the World War, and elderly people can remember having heard their parents tell of similar displays about tha time of the beginning of the War of the Rebellion.

Scientific obaervera seem to he fairly agreed that whatever may be the precise nature of the aurora borealis It Is most conspicuous In the temperate latitudes at about the peak of the eleven year sunspot cycle, which happens to coincide roughly with our great war periods and which may rather plausibly ex-plain the relationship between the trampling atreameni of the northern heavens anil the tragic armed con- flirts.

But there would always rernain. In some minds, the Intriguing ques-tion of whether or not the northern lights, If they derive from sunspot condlUons, do not drive double with human behavior. Whether the same cause that brings the lights does not alsq bring the mailness. the emo-tional Instability, that finds Its ex-pression In liltter ronlniverjty and war.

Certalnly-rthmughout all of his-tory there have been periods when the human race appcareil, so to •ipeak, fo be possessril by dcvlla— and this Is one of those periods. Are eunepote to blame? If they are. there wouldn’t .seem to be very much anybody can do about It,

A DMdIy New W rM de During the Bpanlah etyll war,

Barcelona haa been bombed ^thout ever hearing or seeing the planes that did I t . . . A Franco airplane recently akimmed - Into Barcelona harbor, touched the water long enough to itart a torpedo squirming through the waves towaiU a BriUeh freighter, then skimmed over the deck of the doomed ship a moment before the torpedo etnick. . , .'The ■hip went down In three' minutes. . . . That Is aotnething new to think ■bout In warfare. . . . One thing Hitter no doubt realises, that thistime Turkey Is friendly toward Brit aln, which opens the Dardaneltea toallow a many.

backdoor attack on Oer-

H e a lt h a n d D ie t A d v ic e

By OB. rB A N B MeUOt

In n e w Y o r kMBN NEW TARGET OT" PENT was that tbs premier o f "lOea the

TH AT SCRATCHED ''THE WOMEN

HIGH BLOOD PRESSITRB.

W ash in g to nD ayb o o k

' f ly flrss isa G r a v t r

Wa.shlngton—Notes on war;Old you know that a plane could

drop tons of bombs on London with-out passing over the city? It could.

When a bomber "linos up" on Its target. It may be traveling 2.10 miles an hmir. With a tailwind It might be doing 300 or more. Under auch eonditloni a plane 20.000 feet In the air must release ita bomb ae many aa five itlllee before It gets over the target. At the moment of relea.se, the bomb le traveling at the same apeed aa the plane. It continues Its forward flight while It Is descending, following a long, downward curve from the time It lea\*es the plane un-til it etrikes.

That means that If enemy planes were flying to bomb London, they would have to be shot down three to five miles before they reached the city. Olherwl.se their bomba would already be on the way down and the planes might have turned back for home without ever having passed over the city.

GANG STILL RULES

PALESTINEHaving reaolved’ to settle the

1 lleatine problem la Its own way t a Brltlah government la proceed-

r to operate Ita Holy Land policy though iU derica for the divlolon the couatiy tnto thraa parta—a eBh Palaettae, aa Arab Palestine

A Wttab-nieadated Pateatlae—aw fuD i oCfdl

Apparently there is neither con-trition on the part of the old Dem- ocraUc machine In Waterbury. nor any thought of letting control of party affairs In the Braes a t y get out of Its own hands. It appears to have wangled, with the able aa.siat- ance of Democratic State Chairman Francle J, Smith, the nomination of A candidate In the Sixteenth Sena-torial Diatrict to whom the Inde-pendent Democrata, who have > »««

Hayai machine,

Bomb After Bomb Every soldier with a grain of air

knowledge knows London could be bombed over and over again In spite of the beet defense now avaUable.. Plane* .sweeping In from the North Sea could be over London before counter-attacking planes could get up to fight them.

Shel\a from modern anti-aircraft yna could reach these planes be-

fore they are In position to drop their bombs, even though they may do(t|t five mllee out. American-three- inch anti-aircraft gune have a verti-cal range of 30,000 feet, roughly six miles. The range is much greater If the gun Is fired at an angle in- ■tead of straight up.

But hitting a plane at five miles Is a feat. An exploding antl-alreraft ■hell will spray fragments over a •xone aa large as a footbaU field. Getting the shell to explode when a plane is In that sons la eomething else again, but It can be done.

But. on the other hand, it’s diffi-cult for a plane four mites up and five miles out to drop a bomb on a ■peclfle epot. Even a alight miscal-culation of wind directioa might make the bomb mlea Ita target a half mile.

Every Londoner knows that a bomb that fails tO hit Buckingham pnlace, a warehouse, or a rail ter-minal, may land a^d a t deace throngs In Piccadilly, Soho or Kea- Bington. Although' iMUtary men doubt that a hard praeaed army wmdd waste bomba on civUian

An abnormal Increase In blood pressure la called high blood prea- aura or arterial hypertension. Tha normal blood pressure In the aduH should- range between 130 and 140 Olid I conalder Jhat any reading abova 140 la evidence of high blood preaaure.

In the early stages, high blood pressure commonly exists ’ without producing any symptoms and be-cause of Its being symtomlesa, the patient is not warned o f hla danger. As the disease progresses, certain ayroptoma may, or may not occur, but these are generally vague when they do arise, and are by no means of such a nature that they Invaria-bly point out their real cause. These symptoms Include headache, dlsst- neas, vague aches and poiiie and ■hortnees of breath. Slmular symp- toma are of course commonly pro-duced In many disorders other than high blood pressure.

In the beginning, the biqod pres-sure usually varies from time to time, rising abruptly and then re-ceding, but aa a general rule a fter- several years have passed,' It bo- comes constantly high. It haa been noted that the tendency toward high blood pressure may be found among different members of the same fam-ily and out of the family group, two nr three may all experience thm rise In blood preaaure around some cer-tain age. It has also been noted that high blood pressure Is quite cnmmnniy found among those of a stocky type of body build. These individuals may be overweight; and are of on active, striving tempera-ment.

The usual type of high'blood pres-sure Is a disorder of middle age, fre-quently developing in women In the years from 40 to 60. In men, the ainrt is often 0 yeara later, the disorder developing between 45 and 50. It Is generally considered that the earlier the disease appears after adolescence, the more severe the case.

In the very early stages, high blood preaaure seemingly represents a physiological disturbance In the arteries and Is functional In nature, in that there are no organic changes associated with it. ,

A fter It hae been eatabllshad for some time, the walls of the arteries may undergo certain changes. In this manner, the walla may become progressively thickened and the blood vessels themselves may be-come narrower, making it harder for the blood to be pumped through them.

After the high blood pressure state has continued for many years, cither the heart or the kidneys may bo gradually affected. When euch Is thp case, the patient develops cither what Is called "Hypcrtcnalvs Heart Dlseaae,’’ or some type of kidney trouble eueh aa Bright’s Dis-ease. Because of these possible Involvementa of the vital organs, high blooil pressure may have an Im-portant bearing upon health and life. As a general nile, the heart enlarges aa to size, but the kidneys shrink.'

It has been pointed out that the compensatory powers of tha bmly are so great that the patient may he well able to live along with high .l)lood pressure for a long period of years, without any particular syrop- toms. When the blood presaure la only moderately elevated and the p.> lent is past middle nire and es-pecially when the blood preaaure rise rcmiilna flxe<l at a constant cTcl, the patient may quite possibly expect many more yeara of normal living, particularly when he takes care of himaelf. An extremely high blood presaure On the other hand should be carefully watched and studied and every effort ehould be made to reduce It to a safer level. The condition of the heart and kidneys Is of greater Import-ance than the' blood pressure figure In most cases, "The greater the de-gree of Injury to the.se organs, the more careful the patient .mnet’ be.

In tomorrow’s article I shall die- rfias tha treatment T find to be the best for high blood pressure. Look for It la thia newspaper.

ulattono, a irwarmjof plaaea b o m £ ^weta^ "leglUmate'’ ariUtary.

Ql'ER'nONH AND ffNSWKRA.

(G rapefm ltlQuestion; S. S. wHtes; "When all

my friends had colds, I tried your suggestion about making a grape-fruit infusion as I felt that I was coming (town with a cold. It tasted so g o ^ T cut up another grape-fruit and drank more of the liquid, cr-ntlnulng this throughout the day without taking anything else. To my surprise, the cold lymptoms went away. Do you think It waa the grapefruit Juice which headed it off, or was it Just that' at that jisrt.icailar tin e my rcelstanee svaa g ^ ? Tf I get another suggestion of a cold this winter, I Intend to re-peat the grapefruit infusion."

Answer: Of course, it is very like-ly, that your resistance waa un-usually high when you succeeded in throwing off a eeld so easily; al-though' the alkaltzlag affect o f the grapefruit Infusion may have been helpfuL Inasmuch as you recMva w eb good rawlta, u would u a

tAH B M ttM a

New York—Clare Boothe’s new show, "Kiss the Boyrs Goodbyq," has made Its Broadway debut—and so-ciety folk are hieing to their bonh- proof shelters.

Miss Boothes happens to be the holy terror of Park Avenue, and at her approach pedigreed bluebloods deny their listing In the Socjal Reg-ister. She frightens them by what she writes, so naturally they ara At-tracted, like moths to the llama, wherever her ohowa are plajrlng. Then they sulk away In their top hats and ermines to the snobbleh taverns to discuss the calumny tt>At Ml.os Boothe has heaped upon them.

Also, they are not forgetting that In private life Miss Clare Bootha la Mrs. Henry R. Luee, wife of the young publisher of Time, Fortune, Life and other Joumala; and that, therefore, she le a social arbiter and that incurring her Ire is like sound-ing one’s own knell of doom. So it

Boya Goodbye” brought out the un-titled nobSlty o f Manhattan's up-

clawesae. Oh, yea. and still like the Ating,

per c!fruh, __ ___the memory o f Sfiss Bdothe’e last work, "Tha Women,” which aepoeed Park Avenue bubea for tba feUne creatures they are and showed them up at their worst

ScratdiWell, here ,U "Kiss th4i Boys

OeodbyF' and Miss Boothe ia la no more charitable moixl than she araa the liuR time about tba Mphlatl- cates. She is on a hilarious track on this occasion becauss shs hw taken advantage of the nation’s •tandlng Joke, namely the dreary search for a Scarlftt O’Hara, as the them* of her current clawing ser-mon.

A group o f terrible' peonis ara gathered for a weeh-ead m Oonneo- ticut and among them Is a movie producer in quest of a southsni belle to typify the south in thst best- salUng Bsga, "Kiss the Beys Good-

bye." Rs Is a eoaraa mogul and his feUow waek-andsrs artn’t much bat- tsr.

Thea our hsroina tuns up. Shs Is as southern as a mint Julsp on the verandah Of the ol' planUtton and more than anything eleo In the world, she wanU to play Velvet O’Toole in "Klas the Boya Q o ^ Bys." (Got lt?J

But the gentlemen la' the party ■rant her for other purpoeee a bioken-doarn glamor girt lent much oompetltlon, either.

So pit Mlea Innoosnoe from the land o f honeyatKhlo against A hard- boUed mob, and what do you sup- poao hwpena? Bxaetly. She U ahead of the game at the final cur-tain and she exposea them all for iaglorloua nltwltA And she gets ths part o f Vslvet OToole, too.

And that Is tho glat of I t One critic said that Miss Boothe didn’t write "Kiss the Boys Goodbye” with a. fouatalB pen but with her long nails, and he said a mouthful. For tha lady who ahowed no quarter to her sex la "Tbd Women” is being squally nithleas against ths mem-bers o f both her-and the opposite •CK In her lateat effort. But she la not quite as funny sad thst la why we don’t think thst "Kiss ths Boys Good-bya” will ba omlnenUy suo-

oeasful oa Broadway. Owrtalnly IClaa Booths can’t hmd it liffalnst the playeta, becatue they do a su-. parb job and a young M y by the' name of Helen Oatre who pertraye tha southern bello does shout the best Job o f mimicry we have seen on a stage in half a decade.

We hope Miss Booths taken a gentler view of the human raes the next time.

Slag OutAs we predicted, after watching

and reporttng oa that vieaelooa re-vue, "Sing Out ths NswB"-iB Phila-delphia, it ia a Broadway h it The Fiiiit Nightera and aubaaguaat au- diencea have taken to thia mualeal axtravagansa written by tba boys who put together Labor's "Pins and Nandles" last year.

Mayba tha Manhattan pUygoasa ara pro-Naw Deal, aa tha ahow is. Mayba they Uka arttty skatohaa. slngabla songa and axoltlag negro numbers. Anyway, they ara pur- chaalng enough tiokata to make "Sing Out tha Nowa" one of the towJa mualeal sureiasH.

Fire and Explosion Wreck Garage,

Hulks of Two Cars Destroyed in Talcottville Fire

Fife and a tanifle axploatoo ahort-Sreport the trouble whan the blast

O f tha approximate 41,000,000 motor vahlolaa in tho world today, about 70 par cent of the total are regtsterad in tha Unitad Statoa.

7 u ;o ways to (urm'sh an ex tra bedroo m

at 6 4 t h A N N I V E R S A R Y .Savin gs

Stu d io c o u ch w iths o l i d . m a p l e st e a m -b e n t

arms and back rest $ 3 4 . 5 0

A brand new feature that adds considerable grace to this maple studio couch . . ths amts ara steam-bant to a graceful curve (not noticaabls in sketch.) In addi-tion. this couch has a back rest o f maNa for tha three 100% kapok pillows, flO-coi) spring base, OO-Coil Inner- spring mattress, biscuit tufting and corded edges Choice of colors. Regular $40.75.

b hr*

This Is the biggest dollar’s worth o f style and quality conatruotion we’va ever been able to offer! Styled to fine old Sheraton originals and featur-ing a aleigh bed, thcac placaa arc made of ganutna mahogany. SO-operatlon aleehol and mar-resist-ant flntah. Regular $149.00.

H a ir U p h o lst e re d M a llr essesBox Springs $ 2 2 . 5 0

EACH*

The "Windsor” inneraprinsr mattresses and box springs with hair and cotton uphol-stery . . are reduced from $35.00 to $U.60 each for this Anniversary Celebration. Holman-0. D. Baker custom made. Tui and wlyte woven hair-proof ticking. Fine quality bedding at everyday prices I

SolidM a p le

3 Pleas $79M stdl this frmm with Colonial bedrooms you’ve aean priced up to IXU.OO. Beautiful um-top bed with fiOdneh posta. 44-

$ 2 2 . 3 0

Inch draaaer baga with unique acroUed minor. I$-tacb cheat- <m-abaat Oraeaful bracket bases Sturdy solid oak drawer tnUriora; dustproof constnicUon. (XJsual^ $107.00).

A quality studio couch at a price anyona can afford! Regular $35.00 grade. Choice of rust, green or brown covers. 60-coQ gpring base; 90-coU, innerspring mattress With corded edges and biscuit tufting. Openi to full sin or t?^n beds! . i-

&

W A TKINS• R O T H S B S . I N C

*. |y bafoM a o’clock last avealBg dea- troyad taro automobUas and did ax- tenalve damage to a $15,000 three- car brick garage on the eataU of C. Eianntsoa Talcott, preaident of the TUoott Brothara Company, Taleott- vUla. The cars destroyed wara a Llhcobi sedan owned by Mr. Talcott and a Rolls Royce open car, owned by Bruce Beals, son-bi-law of Mr. Tslcott.

The explosion was caused by gasoline fumaa coming in contact with an alectric apark. Chief Roy Griswold, o f tha Manchester Fire Department said after an Investiga-tion. The electric current, which had. been off for 18 days, was turn-ed OR yesterday afternoon about 5 o’clock and tha explosion occurred about 40 minutes later. Accord!^ to an employee of the estate the electric s'^th waa found turned on after the explosion.

Had Notieed the LeakShortly before the explosion the

emoloyee bad been In the garage and had noticed gasoline escaping from one of the pump hose In the front part of the garage and the gajage was filled with gasoline

occurred.Three steel doors of the gsrage

front were blown nearly 100 feeti feet across the back yard, landingn w the Talcott residence and sev-er^ windows In the house

w ----------— ...H. Ufumes. The man was ou his way to last night.

_____ were-shattered by the concussion. The report was beard as far away as Manchester.

Sides Blown OutA side doOr waa blown across the

lawn for several hundred feet and a brick and concrete wall In. the rear of the garage and some of the brick wan on e a ^ side waa blown out.

The Rolls Royce car, owned by] Mr. Beals was entirely destroyed and Mr. Talcott's Lincoln sedan waa badly damaged. A third car. owned by a member of the family, was re-moved from the garage shortly after the expiostOD undamaged, before fire reached I t .

Chief Roy Griswold and a truck from the Manchester Fire Depart-ment responded to the alarm and extinguished the fire.

Officer ChtMs of tbi Stafford Springs Barracks, State Police and Sergeant Frey and an officer of the RockvIUe Police Department were on guard at the Talcott eaUte late

.1Sommoned To Consider AD

Phases Of Reconstmetion FoDowing Horricane. ’

BR1TF0NPAIN11NG GRACES MEMORIAL

ROOSEVET PLANSt a l k o n b u d g e t L

Ik- *>y Bnice Beans,Talcott, in TalcoUVillo laat night.

In the background.(above) ruined In the fire and explosion In Mr. Talcott's own Lincoln aedon is shown

Rear Wall of Tal|ott Garage Blown Out in Explosion

Group Of Famois Americans Portrayed By Late Artist, Gi?en Place Of Honor.

One of the best of the paintings by the .te James Britton waa bung prominently last week In the Mark Twain Memorial, Farmington Ave..* Hartford.

The - painting is o f thst noted iroup of Americans, Mark Twain, Wunam Oaan Howells mud Chants Ojidley iVamar, showing them asat- « « At a table. Clements, Howell and Warner were Hartford neigbbora and were often grouped together os the pointing by Monchester’a great portrait painter deplete them. >

Harriett Beecher Stowe Is shown In the background ot tb painting. Seldom ia a painting done of great Americans, all o f whom are real- dents of one locality. Miss Stowe was educated at Utchfleld Academy, ■ad at bar sister Catherine’s school la Hartford.

Although it la generally known that aemente and Mias Stowe were never InUmste frlenda, her por-trait eras' Included in the picture f y ^ isetitlng one of Connecticut's g r w women, especially noted for

' ll*r hook, "Uncle Tom’s CsMn" of the Civil War era.

Warner waa editor of the Press In Hartford In 1861 and In 1873 in oeOaboratton with Mark Twain he wrote “The Glided Age.”

To Go Oyer Prefiminary Fig* nres And Giro Tentatiyel

‘NEWHAVEir.BACK ON ITS SCHEDULET-

Regnlar Rims Resomed Tluronfli Here; Manches-ter Mails Back To Normal

Regular train service was resum-ed over the Highland Division of the New Tork. New. Haven and Hartford Railroad Company lines this rooming when the 9:81 tram was five minutes late In arriving, it brought In considerable moll and not too large an amount of express. No passengers alighted nor boarded the train except two railroad men who returned to Manchester from posts they bold with the railroad west ot Hartford.

The conductor of the train wbo has been 58 years In the employ ot the road said on reaching Manches-ter thst never In hla long term ot train work did ba recall when there was any such bold up of aervlcea as resulted from the recent flood and hurricane.

With , the restoration of the serv-ice through ManebMter, malls will I>* reoeived and dispatched as usual to the local postofftces.

Washington. Oct. 10.— (A P ) President Roosevelt, returning to WashingtoB from Hyde Park, sched-uled a White House conference to-day on next year’s budget.' Mr. Roosevelt arranged to talk with Secretary Uorgenthauv'Assista- ant Treasury Secretary John Hanee and ActlBg Budget Director Daniel W. BeU. Morgenthau was listed for hla regular Monday lun^eon conference with the President

The chief executive arranged to go over preliminary budget fla res with the Treasury department offi-cials and to give tentative-^decisions on what items might be pared down or Increased.

Mr. Rooaevelt, arriving at 8:2V a. m. (eastern standard time), waa mat at the station by Secretary of Commerce Roper.

Beeldea the Treasury authorities, Mr. Roosevelt’s calling list Included Gov. B. D. Rivers of Georgia and James Gillis. a friend « f Rivers.

To Dlscnaa Shipbuilding. Another acheiduled White House

caUer was Rep. Richard J. Welch of California, who was expected to discuss shipbuilding on the west coast.

In the late afternoon, Mr. Roose-velt planned to receive Robert Bren-nan, the new Irish minister, and Mahmoud Haaaan Bey, new Egyp-tian minister.

Mr. Roosevelt left hla summer home at Hyde Park, at 11 p. m. (eastern standard Ume) last night after a week’s stay. A group of townspeople gathered at the station and stood respocifuUy silent until Mr. Roosevelt called “good night" and they then responded with a "good night"

Hartford. Oct 10— (A P )—The or ganizatlon meeting o f the Gover-nor’s Special RehabllitaUon Cbm- mlttee, summoned to consider all phases of re(»nstniction in C!onnec- tlcut In the wake of the September hurricane, was convened at the state capitol today.

The committee of 24 members, four of whom are serving ex-officIo, waa addressed briefly by the gov-ernor who ouUlned to It the scope of the program he hoped this group to formulate.

The eight counties In the state are represented with the following serving ex-offlclo;

Vincent Sullivan. State W PA ad-ministrator; Public Works Commie aloner Robert A. Hurley: State Cb- ordlnator Thomas Hewee; and La-bor C^mmUeloner Joseph M. Tone

Kepreaentetlvee ol CountlceThe following have been Invited

to represent their Counties on the committee:

Hartford: Graham Anthony preaident o f Veeder Root Co., and preaident ot the Hartford County Manufacturers Association; T. W. Russell, Insurance man and member of the -reorganization committee; and Jamee Olerkln, New Britain, president of the Connecticut Fed-eration of Labor.

New London: Former Mayor Ed-ward Moran, of Norwich; John ’D. Findlay, Stonlngton, former presi-dent. Pa wcatuck Board of TradS; William Bellinger, Norwich, district organiser United TexUle Workers; and John W. Sheedy, New. London city manager.

Middlesex: Joseph Bransfleid, Portland, county commissioner; and E.v Kent Hubbard, Middletown.

» n iN i iu a i iO M io p.W IL L IA M Pk *

U , « o , . r TMoott

ISPECIAL STORM TAX K UNLIKEY

lOCAl SAFETY LANE TO CLOSE SATURCAY

POUCE COURTAfter he had a lle g ^ y thrown _

stone through the plate glaaa fronts window o f a tavern located at 57' Blsseil street, Clarence W. Luttoh, 40, o f 58 Footer street, was sr- rested on complaint by Poltoeman Herman Muake at 5:45 p.m. yester-day according to the report filed to- day at police beaulquarters. Lutton la being held for toam court tonight on charges of Intoxication «nH breach o f the-peace. The reason for

Situation WiD Not Require Special Appropriation Is Present Belief.

Still Many Cara To Go ThroiiRh; Autoisls Warned To Come .\round Early.

ers of automobile* must give moiW attention to tho tost this week.

Tho lane will close at noon 'on Saturday (fntl this means there must be 1,500 cars tested before Satur-day, besides the rc-checklng of cars that were rejected In tho teste al-ready made.

THE MODERN

QUISH

A M B ULA NC E

Will Respond Immediately At Any Hour

It is used egelnsively f or invalid and acci-dent aervice.

t^tton’s aUeged action was not dls-elo— ■rtosed.

Arreoted for parking In front of a fire hydrant, and refusing to show his driver’s Ucenso, Thomas J. Don-nelly of 31 Russell street was noU- fled by Policeman Harold V. Heffron to appear In court tonight to answer to sccueations. According to the report, Donnelly parked In front of a hydrant at Mala and Pearl streets st8;15 p jo . yesterday, and when he was admonished to more hla car, a dispute ensued.

Anthpny Yaucucs, 47, of S27 Burnham street area arreirted m i a charge o f latoxleatkm at Depot Square at 12:10 am . yeetentoy by Policeman Edmund. Dwjor,

BOSriTAL NOTESAdmitted Saturday: Mias Batty

Keeney, 718 North Main strest.

Tbwn offidalB revealed today that it le improbable that a special high-way appropriation will be asked this year to supplement regular work, the extra to apply toward the dam-ages caused by atorm. Witu financial aid extended by W PA unci other sources. Manchester’s "repair bill” has largely already been under-written, and there is no immediate prospect that funds will have to be raised by direct taxation, it waa

lid. ' , Originally, when the flrat reporte of damages were filed. It was feared that an amount os large os $50,000 might have to be spent by the town for reconstruction and cleanup work, but at the pre-sent time, with a large part of the clean-up completed. It appears that addi-tional town-raised money will not b« required.

Today aU of the W PA workmen arho bad been assigned to emer-gency krork were returned to theli varloimregular projeqts.-which, if final Sj^roval Is secured, will In-clude the repairing of the major damage done to local highways and highway bridgea by tha hurricane.

A t the present time, officials .do the necessity for making

Up to noon today 3,473 automo- bllea and trucks had passed through the testing lane on Leonard street.' There had been 153 that went j through the lane this morning and o f' this number 36 were rejected. The laot time the lane was opened i for the early inspection 4.900 cars went through the lane.

As tho opening .was delayed for j three days by tho floods there has i been a warning l.ssued that the own-

TUESDAY A N D WEDNESDAY SPECIALS A T

f V ERY B O D Y'S M A R KET'FREE DELIVERY! DIAL 5721!

notaimUcation for further govemmen*t aid on r ‘

JoMph KaOy. TaloottvUIa, Tho dark, 7 8 .................. ......------- Main atraet, Hartford.

DUebargad Saturday: Olga Kra- Uk. East Hartford, MurlM Scrantoa. 81 Union atiaeL

Admitted Sunday: Mra. Helea Kenney. Hartford, Tlioinae Davta, New Britain.

Birth: Sunday, a daughter to Mr. ■ad Mra. Myitm Lae, Bolton.

Disebaned Sunday: itra, Martha fUader, M l Hartford road, Oeorga

JacobFtacher, 222 School atraet,Bamatt. Slmpami, Pa.

Admitted today: Meredith Btevaa- M. 20 Marble atraet, WllUam

■***•*•May, 60 Bigelow atraet Dlacharged today: David KrlnJak,

lA iPumaU Plaea.OeaMa: Btefy-davan paticate.Xa India, tractora gya «

at* t o ba dIaearM aa

account of atorm or disaster, but if work attributable to this couaa abould develop, more funds niight be asked.

Today, W PA iaveatigators ore In-te r v ie w ^ over 60 addlUcnal local people who are considered eligible for assignment to Manchester proj-ects. I f thesa are enrolled, the to- tnl W PA force here wUl be weU over 500, it waa aald. Assign- mente win ease the direct relief bur- d « a ^ the town charity department.

The regular highway department crews ore conUnulng the collection of rubbish mi streets thst have not

received attentlpn, but storm dsteia is fast dlsappem-ing. Loige woodpiles In many local yards testi-fy to the industry o f private parties In sectoring for themselves a wood ■uppiy for ths winter. P6Uce are

on the lookout for wood thieves, Who have been cruising shout

>U6/V/i td N o m e

injtiu d te, sMxlng on unwhtched ready

mBt wood, which they have Ipwdted « ii tor tbslr owsiaee.

I T 'S not merely pretty lan-guage to say the home is

the backbone o f the nation. It s fMt. The man witli a home is a vital factor in his community. He has an in-vestment in the present and the future that stiffens his backbone in the daily tasks and makes ^him achieve a better-than-average perform-ance.

It ’s easy to build to d a y - ask about our comnlete serv-ice, from plan t(i finandng.

'Pies#, writs er cm'.t Imr tar 24~patt b tt i- I t t ih tm in r wtkr S M A R T REOPLB BIJU.D BEFORE A

with 2t- homa A itiftt

Baldwhi Apples Green Tomatoes Canning Pears Concord Grapes Juicy Oranges Fine Grapefruit Tokay Grapes Soup Bunches Italian Prunes

16-qt. bskt. 39c 16qt. -bskt. 39c 16-qt. bskt. 49e 16-qt. bskt. 69c

20 for 25c 7 for 25c 4 lbs, 25c

each 7c 6 doz. 25c

16-quart bosket $1.19.Sunkist Lemons 10 for 10cMilk or Graham Crackers

2-lb. box 25c

B O O M .______ _____ _____tad crier iWj/el hfii,. Omty ICe.

THE MANCHESTER UJMBER * FUEL CO.

$56 Center S t T e t 8J45

Saltinesstrictly Fresh

Local Eggs Mellow Peaches Pink Salmon . Krasdale Corn Krasdale Flour .

2-lb.box17c

doz. 33c 3 Ibfte 25c

Ige. 1-lb. can 10c 3cans25c

24 i-lb . bag 69c

.1$ K » ‘Swiff's Corned Beef .3 cqns 33e

reoz m

CROSS CONVENES DISASTER GROUP

preeldent o f the Oonnectlent Meau- facturere Aoeoclatlon.

Windham: Sheriff Napoleon Four nler, of Plainfield: and the Rev. William J. Dunn o f Aobford. or-ganizer of the Farmere* Coopera-tive.

Rockville Man For TaUaadTolland: Lawrence U. Dillon ot

^ k v lU e ; and Stole Senator Edwin R. Dlmmock, of Mafisfibld, Conunle- sioner of Domestic Anlmala.

New Haven; CSiarlea Hart, Water- bury; Thomoa Steele. New Haven banker; Edgar L. Tucker. Shelton. aUte master of the Grange; Albert I^ v e^ , Bridgeport, preeldent of the Connecticut caiamber of com-merce, and ' John, McC!arthy, New-town manufacturer.

Litchfield: Samuel Fisher, Utch-fleld. chairman of the Governor's Highway Safety CommUalon; and General Sanford H. Wodhanu, T o r rington, director of the state water commission.

Fairfield; Albert Lavery of Bridgeport and John McCarthy of Newtown.

WEDDM6 ANNnfO IS iR T OBSERVED BY

Couple RcBMmk«t«i ^ Friends At Silver Weiflhw Differ In Polities.

Mr. and Mra. MUtoa Haling og^ Bolton, both prominent in ponttee-nt'' that town, Mr. Hating aa a'RapuMl- ' CM and llfra. H o li^ oa a Domoctal, ^owed that It la poaoibta to BVo haprily togethor even If each bolda a different political npiti»««»

Saturday Mr. and Mra HalJag oh. vervod the twenty-fifth annlvereaiy. ot their -maiTlage, which took piaoa In SCanebeeter on October 8, 19U; ‘ Mr. Haling haa oerved the town cC Bolton In oeveral dlffuant offUna, Including Repreaentatlve and Mra Haling hae alao aerwa the town in important political poattiona.

There were a tow frlenda prooenl to obeerve^ the annlvaraary.

NEED NOW?

We re GI..AD to Jertd where e loan will HELP P<x^ of good character and ability to make m i l regular paymrnts. but who lack the kind of eecurity on ^ r ily required elsewhere can borrow up to $100 Rate of Interest 1%morwhly on unpaid principal nK

2% monthlye x c (^ i^ $ l. . ,_on any remain^

FINANCE C O ^ A N Y19th T m r til TiiFhTrtiit'

781 aiala StiaM B <m 2. State Theater - ■ " ’- r g TeL 8489 UoMMe Na. I9 l

POPULAR MARKET

855 Main StrMt ___ llabiBow BaUdfaiff'-WHERE THRIFTY SHOPPERS S H O P ^ ^

TUESD AY SP E a A L S TUESDa "

SHOULDER

SniLOlMSTEAKS

2 S « '■»•5 c « » .

G R A P E P R U f r

3 (or t O e

HAMBTOO2 lb s .2 5 e

BUTTER

2Sc lb.PLUMS

5 e doz.

UPHOLSTBRDVO .. RECOYBRIMO —

REPAIRING9 Now At Low PricM • Bndffot Tcrau• No Down Psynent « A Yesr or Moro TV> P « j PINK UPHOLSTERY FABRICS TO CHOOSE FROM Ail Work Gnsrantcodt EstiawtM FrosS

P a r l o r F i i m i t i i r o C o .64 North Eln Street Manchester, Cnw^

J. J. GARCIA ewv f » ^ ^Uphokterer i S (k lS

AnnouncementDue to the use of a reverse plate cut that

does not show the revised prices o n Baz* Q-Wash Laundry Service last Monday we list herewith the up-to-date prices on these services:

Damp Wash

Damp Wash

1- 3 Bagr...49c2- 3 B asr.,79cFull .................98c

Fiat Work Ironed (Thrifty)

WashFiat Work Irbned

(Fluff Dry)

1- 3 B a «r ...69c2- 3 B a g .$ U 7

F u l l ............$1.69

1- 3 Ba«r ....... ......... 83c

2- 3 B ag :........$ U 9 j

Full ............. $2.19

N e w M ethod Laiuu•I*W Albany ATo mm

CaO EBtarpriM ISM Wi6^ J

1

T i

OaorifttvgtnoW rt of hiaeffK wanla <

. meeting aad gat that Kti tag in I o f etor

.oomm ir Mr. I

aad Wa Oonn.. «

idamage waa the gave a ngland Woods, has ohm hers for year wii

if It la Uvod amtha local uader-pi "Mo gofl ■tr iageJ

. maetela ticBa or peraonal o f Kiwa

The b awat in nsed In i mw)f***. te buUdt ■upplemi apuitiial

'- if . The al R. K. At Bmiae. ttoa for l^ p Rii loot thcli daatroye< the moth

RDSSIilLIND

AD

la a v«

PubI ty new called lackey Fhsclsl

It a neete Germn enougl ■treng B ^ e t ' HU was ti ■rguir o f Cz(

The hergb tors, ' o f Bm cans I

. out az

• ment

the i cordli the S pie c tee i and t

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ouelkno

"J- Dedp -Havlnj

Be, Llnbe at himsel9teer.'

"HU aefeia first.hi •toy la M|ob of chi

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Page 4: RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR 'LIES' ABOUT AIR ...

A 0E V 15

ERSiUtT

r W a -

rn Raiiiif „ in polttte^U.

M s-IUpiiMt.-'. I • DwBocrii^"« ■ibto to lU F f if each bold* nion. "1, % HaJjB(o»> iI ajuttvMwiyj!li took puon ober S. i m . the town OC 3rcat oOloM,' ra unt Mnu tlM town in

ttJona. tondo

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i t t lX B fA N C H E S T B B BVEN 1M O BE fC AttO . B tA N C H E S T E R , O O N N ^ M O N D A T , OC7TOBEK 10,L0^ ^ T O

rAMANSHEAR LEADER LECTURE

lor Of Hew EBgieiid Oistrict P iijt OfRdel tnk T i The Local Group.

(horga Barrioon of Portland. Me.. HTBor at the New England Dla- of Kiwanie Intemdtlonal, made

hia official alaltatlon to the local Kt> wanla Oub at ita weekly noonday

. moating at tha Country Club today nvw Accoufit of ttaw work

that inwanU cluba are doing In aid-ing in tha relief and pohaWllUtlon o f atorm-ravaged New England

u'nomm' mltlea. *Mr. Harrtaon aaid that principal

offorta are concentrated at Orange ' and Ware. Mam.. New London.' Conn., and Weaterly, R. L. ' where -damage from hurricane and flood waa the groataet The apcaker alao gave a raaume 'of the recent New Engiand convention at Bretton Wood*. He eald that the Otatrict

to coma within cannot abot of our leaderahip!

"Another unbridled lie MIowed. Undbeigh declared the Soviet air fleet la without leaderahip and la in chaotle condition.

“Soviet aviation holda a majority cit world raoorda.. The Soviet Union baa bundreda and thouaanda of per-fect'ptlota who not only know bow to fly but at any time could be per-fect organlxera and leadcra."

Ftotterer Of n u dsULindbergh, the statement said,

“playa the role of stupid liar, lackey and flatterer of German Phactsts and their English, aristocratic _pro- tectora. He had an order from Eng- llah reactionary circles to prove the weakness ef Soviet aviation and give Chamberlain an argument for capitulation at Munich In connec-tion with Csechoslovakla..."The bribed liar, Lindbergh, ful-filled the order of his masters. That

HITLER WOULD MAKECZECHS VASSAL STATE

(OMtiaiied from Page Oaa.)

mans were removing materials from tbe-fortifled lines In tha Sudetehland and shipping them to their western frontier to speed up completion of the Siegfried line facing Prance. Such materials wsre said to inelude

lUrritory agreed upon by Interna, tional hegotlatton.

With the occupation o f the called flfth Bone completed, no fur-ther steps were expected until au- thorlaed by tha Intemar' ' ~ mlasloa aitllng in Berlin.

Tha territory already occupied in- eludes between M and 90 par cent of that where live the Sudeten Germans in Cseehoalovakia.

(The ooeupatlon was accomplish' ed with very little disorder. Tha olBelal German ntws agency, DNB, reported yesterday, however, that two Sudeten Germans were shot and killed by Caechoslovak soldiers at Troppau a few hours befpie German troops entered that city, DNB also said a 14-year-old boy was shot to

NAZISWARNED WAR DANGERS

SULL EXIST

NEWIYWEDS m GUESTS I r o B i f U A R y ”AT NORTH e n d f ARTY

Showflr O f G ifts F o r M r. Anil M rs. A . J. Ld Dnc— O ver 35

P resen t A t Th s A ffs ir .

(Ownttauafl from tiaga.OM.)

former Foreign Secretary Anthony ..............................d-

explains everything." Thaistatement iaid that Lindbergh

had made the statements about the Soviet air force at a dinner given in London by Lady Aator "aome dayaago."

Taaa (offlcial Soviet nnwa agency) Hated as aignera of the statement the foUowlng heroea of the Soviet union: Molokoff. Vladimar Kokinakl. who flaw from - Moscow to Vladtvoatok last mimmer; Mavriky Slepneff, Geoigl Baldukoff. Sergei Oanllln,

S . '"m lt ^ o ? 't h ;| V « '" i Chkaloff. Alexander Belaikoff: ^ « c l Z ’o^anls^^^ .8P>rin and Mikhail Oromoff. aiiyear with four new clubs organised.

Citm Pnadaroentala Tha Dlatriet preatdent also inter-

preted some of the Klwanls funda- Maatala, pointing out that Klwanta. if it is to be understood, muit be lived and absorbed. He commended the local club for lU work of helping uadcr-privUeged children, aaying "No gooS deed is ever wasted.’’ He atremii the value of Klwanls funds- meatala by asking a aeriea of quea- Uena and applying the same in a

' paiaonal manner to each member o f Klwania.

Higher atfamuhlp The two words "to give’’ ere the

most important of any of tboad uacd In anumeraUng Klwania funda- mmtala, he declared. Klwania aids la building a blgbar citlsenahip and aipplemcnta the church in ita ■puitiuil alma,' be aaid.

. . The attendance prise, donated by %. K. Anderson, was won by H. B. BMwe. The club voted a $10 dona- tton for tha Beckwith family of Deep River, flve members of which leet their lives when their home waa dsetroyed by Are recently, leaving the mother with three children.

of whom had participated In trans- Polar flights either to the/ Soviet Polar weather base or to America; at.d a flier named Serolf. In addi-tion, Flier Order-Bearer Demchenko

steel anti-tank barricadee totalling j death at BchUlerdorf as Caechoalo* several hundred miles In length. - I ^ak forces lefL )

' Disorders la Oocn^tloii 'The government announced that

German troopS had penatratad be-yond the new Caechoelovak-^Ierinan Ifrontier in sU instances and report- j collection being taken for re

ABOUT TOWNed several disorders in connection to S t Jamea’a church to cover with German occupaUon. | tha coat that resulted from the hur

rieane is proving satisfactory. ’The

signed the statement.Theey accused Lindbergh of making

the false eriticisma; but he waa not only the "bribed liar," the aUtement continued. It asserted he haa been among aviators whose air explotta could be equalled today hy "any col-lective farm worker or atiidcnt'' In tha Soviet.

Received Only Normal Aid Thq American embassy said that

during hla visit to Moscow In Aiiguat, Lindbergh received only such assist, anee as normally would have bean given to travaling Americana.

’The amba<<By attitude waa that Lindbergh was not In Moscow as the guest of tha United SUIee gov- ernmmt any more than any other American citizen.

RUSSANS DENOUNCE UNDBERGH FOR‘LIES’

ABOUT AIR S1RENGTH

IiOaaUnaafl fretn Page Une.)

la a very atrioua thing that when a promlnant American airman’’

*tbay aifor tala

being lunched by these people, ■tired him it waa IrntMealble country to do anything" be-

Oermany'a air force waa *%etter than the Russian, Britleh u d French combined.’’ )

The Moscow statement was signed h f aiovsn Soviet airmen. Including OvU AvUtlon Chief Vasily Molo- koir. Ten o f the group had been deMgnated officially as "heroes of the Soviet Union."

Galled "Stupid Liar." Published in the Communist par-

ty newspaper Pravda, the statement -^ ted Lindbergh a "stupid liar, a lackey and a flatterer of German Fascists’’ 'o

It accused Lindbergh of telling nests of Lady Astor in London that Cermnny’a air fleet waa powerful enough to defeat the combined air strength of France, England, the Soviet union and Czerhoalovakla.

Hla purpose, the statement said, waa to provide Chamberlain with arguments for handing over part.s o f Czechoslovakia to Adolf Hiller.

’The statement characterized Lind.

LInrIbergh waa received enthusl- oatlcally by Soviet offtciHla when he and hla wife made their surprise visit to Moscow last Aug. 17.

On tjie clay after their arrival, tha] Lindberghs were guests at tha 8o Viet "Aviation day" celebration From seats among Soviet offleiaii they saw moss demonatrationa by parachute Jumpers, stunting by scores of planes, and a sham bat-tle in the air.

The American flier vlaiUd the air sesdemy where Soviet aviators are trained, Inspected Industrial plants outside Moscow, and studied the technical progress of Soviet avia- tion tinder the guidance of Moscow engineers.

Flew To UkraineOn Aug, 3fl. Col. and Mrt. Und.

bergh flew from Moscow to the So-viet Ukraine. A fter two stops In the Ukraine they flew to Rianla on Aug. 31. On Sept. 1 they made an unacheduled landing at Olmuetz, central Czechotlovakla, then went on to Prague.

At Prague, Lindbergh talked with President Eduard Bcnea and waa decorated by the Czechoslovak gov-ernment. He and hla wife flew from Prague to Paris.

In October. 1037. the Lindhergs vUited Germany. A t Munich, the aviator heard the chairman of the LUlenthal scxiletv for aviation re-search pay tribute to him st one of the society’s aesslona

In Berlin, he vtsitod alrcrnft fac-tories under the guidance of (ten. Ernst TMel, German World War ace.

F iO fR E n IN nEB\TEIvondon. Oct 10, — (A r i- Coi.

rharles A. Llndliergh's nctlvltles

of Commons debate last Thursday, when Prime Minister Chnml)orl:iin «on a lest vote on his foreign policy.

o f Soviet hospitality toward Aiiierl cars by barging Into Mosco-v with-

» out an invitation.Among other things, the state-

ment said:"Five years ago Lindbergh visited

the Soviet union, where ho was cordially and alncercly received by the Soviet people. The Soviet peo-ple cordially opened to Lindbergh the doors of schools and theaters and the gates of airports.

Came Without Invitation"And then, not long ago. Lind-

bergh again ylilted the Soviet union. I t should be noted that nobo<Iy in-vited him, and that if he was'per-mitted to come it was hccauac Americans had requested It,

Labor member, very prominent

Ellen Wilklnaon, referred then to a American airman."

“ influential people in thla country had told Chancellor Hitler and Von Rtbbentrop i German foreign min-ister > that In no circumstances would Britain light for Czechoslo-vakia or Austria." she said.

“ It Is a very serious thing that when a very prominent airman was being lunched by these people- and all sorts of official people invited to meet him, they a.saured him It waa ImpoBslhle for this countrv to

"Availing himself of this perrais-|< “ anjthlng because Germany's'air- alon. Lindbergh attended .Aviation i ® ''" ’ s better than the Russian, ®®y (demonatialion Aug. I-k during ' Urtti'/h ami French combined. That the American aviator'a vialt to Mos- i the defeatist attitude behind the €»w» and now that he ha.s returned! si cnea.” to Lopd&n he baa used his i'Jjourn j The Soviet altack, in the Soviet union as the basis o f ' arose from unverified

apparently

^umnica and insolent attacks on ' Hahed here that Lindbergh seve^lv the Rovuf ------------ lerlllrlzed the Soviet 'tte 'Soviet union—which was the dlah served up to guests of Lady Actor.

'The statement, replying to al- l6|'e<i aaaerUors in Lx)ndon by the ^ e r lc a n avattor to the effect that ™ Soviet air fleet was weak and ataorganized, aaid that Lindbergh lold guests of I-ady Aator that “Ger- Bixny poasessea such a strong air fwce it is capable of detesting the COTbined air__ fleets of England,

T/.S.S-R. and Czeehoelo-

"On what basU does he draw conclusion? Only AUah

Dodded On Another Lie ^ *TIavlng uttered such a colossal

Llnbergb waa inwardly amazed at himself and. decided to try an- •tker. ^

"His SMonij declaration exceeded Us first He said that durl^ his

la Moscow he was offered the |ob of chief of Soviet civil aviation. _ "IJndbergh probably haa not read Bflgol and doesn't know the name K Glestakoff. (Glestakoff was a W ^ t e r la Gogol’s play, "Re- fuor. Ha was a lw a^ boasting tad lying.) ^

"Ltedbergh la the role o f ‘chief sf.avlaUoa’l among us pilots such 1 Wild Ua would only cause laiightarl *""*■ aowallsd pOots, aad

hsJ made no statement.airforce. He

BOUND FOR BERLIN .Lc Bomget. France, Oct. 10. '__

(A P i—Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and Miz. Lindbergh took off In their plane from Le Bourget airport at 2:25 p. m. today (9:25 a. m.. e. a. t ) and airport oflicisls said they were bound for Berlin.

Lindbergh. , who has made hia home on Illlee island off France’s northern coast since last June, ar-rived at I,« Bourget on Oct. 5. A t that time he declined to disclose any plans for travel in the near future.

Lindbergh maintained hia cus-tomary silence.

He had left hia plane at the airport here since Oct. 5 because of bad fly.

«>t“ nilng by train to m? thence tolUlec island. He came back to Faria during the week-end for the take-off today,

Frlenda of the American flier ««id they understood he planned to at-tend the annual meeting of the Llll- enthM Society for Avdatlon Research opening at Berlin Wednesday.

Threq Czechoslovak state police and teveral members of the Sudeten German Free Corps wsre said to have been wounded In m machine- gun battle on an Elbe river bridge near Aussig. The Czechqalovaks cap-tured a machine-gun and freed a police inspector who had been taken prisoner.

One Czechoslovak soldier waa re-ported injured near Kdyne by Free Corps troopers who kicked and beat him.

Several Police Wounded Several members of a state police

detachment were aaid to have been wounded in a fight at MIkulov Sun-day with German storm troop and elite guard formations.

’The government, meanwhile, waa occupied In settling details of the new provincial government of aub- Carpathlan Russia (Ruthenia), the extreme eastern portion of Czecho-slovakia., Konstantin Hrabara, civil gover-

nor, resigned afid Ivan Parkany, i minister for the province In the national cabinet, was named to succeed him.

TO RESIST INVASIONWith Czechoelovak Force* on the

Hungarian Frontier. Oct. l(>-:-(AP)—• Steel - helmeted Czechoslovak troops reinforced positions at Ko- marom and other towns near the Hungarian frontier today, prepared to resist any tnvaalpn before aiv|,. agreement Is reached on cesalon of Slovak territory to Hungary.

Almost an« entire regiment, in-cluding many American Slovaks who had volunteered for service in the Czechoslovak arhiy, moved Into towns about 40 miles from Ko- marom, whete a Czechoslovak-Hun- garinn commission was attempting to decide the amount of territory to be given to Hungary.

Negotiations opened with a Hun-garian demand that Czechoslovakia agree to Immediate military occu-paUon of regions having more than 50 per cent Hungarian population and pleblscltea to deternilna the atalus of other points.

It waa expected that Czechoslo-vaks would damand con.’ilderatlon for 350.000 Slovaks now living un-der Hungarian rule as a counter proposal.

Frontier Inrldento Reported In unofficial Czechoslovak quar-

ters thera wera reports of frontier Incldentz. A number of Hungarians were said to have been killed and one Czechoslovak wounded In a ilungurlan attack on frontier guards at Sahy, 85 miles southeast of Uretlslava.

A Czechoslovak commanding of- fleed said army officlala wore hav-ing difficulty in restraining soldlera, deeply resentful of further dismem- bermont of the republic. The aol- dlera wanted to fight to preserve what was left of Czechoelovakla's territorj'.

Tho officer said all newa of po-litical dovciupments was being i)’lthhcld from the troops so as not to arouse further their emoUons.

He said there was a poaaibillty of revolt in the Army If Hungary's dc- mana were prc.sacd too far.

The Danube river bridge connect-ing the Hungarian and Czechoslo-vak parts of Komarom was heavily guarded on the Czechoslovak side.It wa.s mined with HO pounds of high explosive, ready to be set off should Hungarian troops attempt to march before entry waa agreed upon.- Admiral Nicholas Hortby, regent

of Hungary, waa said to have visit-ed Hungarian eoldlcra at Komaron. cautioning them not to provoke hostllltlrs pending completion of diplomatic ncgotlatibna.

. Prepare To Occupy Komarom. Czechoslovakia (On

the Hungarian Frontier). Oct. 10.—. (A P )—Hungarian forces today pre-pared to occupy two border points which (?zechoalovakla'a negotiators in the Komarom conference agreed yesterday to hand over as a pre-liminary to the proposed cession of Hungarian-Inhabited areas of the

-dismembered republic.The two points were designated

In an official statement laat night aa the railway junction of Satoralja UJhely. Just aerbsa tha border from the Hungarian city of that name and 10 miles northeast of Budapest, and Ipolysag. 50 miles north of Budapest. The former is to be oc-cupied at midnight tonight; Ipolysag by noon tomorrow.

Negotiations of Czechoslovak and Hungarian officials on Hungary's demands, begun in tiila border town yesterday, eontinued today. Buda-pest sourcea aaid Hungafy waa de-manding surrender uncondluonally of about 16,000 aquara kilometers 6,1(8 square miles) of "pure Hun-

garian regions'* along Czechoslo-vakia’s Aiuthern border. Thla area contains about 1,300 communities with a total population of 1,200,000, Including 860,000 Hungariana.

The Prague government is leaving the parley largely in the handa of leadera of Slovakia, the autonomoua unit which will be chiefly affected by the ceaaiona.

collectoni will continue their work until October 16.

A t a meeting o f tha men and women of St. Bridget'a church to be held tonight, action will be taken on the plan for a card party to be held on November 11.

A distribution o f federal com-modities will taka placa later thla week It' waa announced today by A i- Miatant Charity Superviaor Albert Kebrend.

A total of $621.16 haa been con- Irrfiuted to the local Red Croaa fund that will be turned over for the re-lief of storm sufferers to New Eng-land, it was announced today by the Mancbeater Trust Company.

Mr. and Mrs. Francla B. Breemof 16 Benton atreet ware pleasaAlysurpriaed yesterday afternoon when a number of their frlenda called tb aseUt them In the celebration of their flrat wedding anniversary. GuaaU wera prasant from N o i^ c ^ Baltic and Mancheatar.

Anderaon-Sbea Auxiliary, V. F. W., will meet tomorrow evening at the V. F. W. home, Mancbeater Green. The membera are remlnd- i d to make returns for their new caps at this meeting.

Miss Helen Pritchard of Hart-ford. dean df girls at the Hartford

■cEooI,' will be the gueatIhibllc High speaker at tbs meeting of the Msa- fheeter Garden club tonight at 7:80 at tho Y, M. C. A. Members will recall that Misa Pritchard gave a delightful lUuatrated lecture before the club a year ago. She la a great traveler and a lover of nature. This summer she spent her vacation In Norway and Sweden, end will show a number of color^ pictures of lovely Scandinavian gardens and scenes. The gardeners are urged to Invite friends to enjoy this treat with them.

The organlsaUon meeting of the Board of Police Commiaeloners will be held at the police station court room tomorrow evening st 8:30 with Introduction of the newly ap-

''pointed board member, William Allen to t ^ department ataff. Fol-lowing the organization of the police board for the year an Inspection of the department wUI be conducted.

Daughters of Liberty No. 136. Loyal Orange Ladles institution, wll hold its aimuaj meeting .tomor-row night at 7:20 in Orange Hall. The aecond degree will be conferred on a large class of candidates, also on a number from Charter Oak Lodge No. 317 of HarUord. The auditing committee will make lU re-port tomorrow night, and the buai- nesa aeaMon will be foUowe<( by a social hour in the banquet hall. Mrs. Florence Stratton and her commit-tee will be in charge.

Regina D’ltalia society held Its seventh annual banquet yesterday at tho Willow Inn. East Hartiord, with 75 membera and friends In at-tendance. Tho committee arranged for their conveyance to and from East Hartford by bus. The dinner served at 1 o'clock conaiated of aa- HortCil antipasto, ravioli, chicken, coffee and fruit. Speecbea were made by officers and some of the guests. Singing and dancing follow-ed. Mrs Lucy Paganl, chairman, was asalated by Mrs. BelctU and Mrs. Teresa Gavello.

The Willing Workers group of the Wesleyan Guild will serve a harvest supper Wednesday evening at 6 o’clock at the South Methodist church. The meal will consist of corned beef, turnips, potatoes, cab-bage, carrots, beets, tea or coffee, apple or aquaab pie. A Uberal re-duction will be made for children. Reaervatlons should be made by Tuesday noon, by contacting tbe group leader, Mrs. Leo Schendel, telephone 4438, or the pastor. Rev. Earl E. Story.

DRIVE FOR Y FUNDSNOW ON IH TOWN

Leaden And Worken Meet To Outline Plana For Contin- ning Financial Campaign.

CTaptala Thomas of the Hartford Fire department has been secured by cauef Griswold o f the Manche*- ter Are department to address the members of the Manchester Are de-partment tonight The chief wtahi to have all members of No. i and No. 3 Company p'resent at fire head-quarters at 7:30 tonight when Cap-tain Thomas will give hia address.

Working on laying sidewalks on the east side of Main atreet border-ing Outer Park, discontinued fol-lowing the hurricane, was resumed this \rornlng. I f the fuU working period is allowed the walk will be finished thla week. The men who have been employed in the refor- cstration work will be continued on the clean up of brush and damaged trees before returning to work at the water sheds where it will be necessary to cut new Are lanao.

Thomas J. Rogers, general chair-man of tbe Y. M. C A. financial campaign, offlclaUy declared the 1938 dshre opened on Friday night, October 7, at a rally of the division and team workers held in tbe gym-nasium of tbe Y. M. C. A.

Mr. Rogers charged the workers with the responsibility of raising money to meet the new budget necessary to carry on an adequate community program. Mias Marion Tinker, general aacretary o f tb e 'Y . M. C. A., outlined the new program, which includea facUlUea and numer-ous new actlviUaa for sU. She stated that the Y. M. C. A. now has a trained, experienced staff to earr>' on a community program.

The campaign organlzaUoo and method of aoUcitatlon wera ex-plained by E. Gerry Tracy, men’a and boys’ secretary of the Y. M. C. A. Mr. Tracy said that tha flrat re-port meetlng'Of the campaign woifid be held Tuesday, October 18 at 7:30 p. m. All commanders, captains and workers will report progreM made at this time.

BOBO, THE MONOREt.BECOMES A HERO

Enough concrete waa used In construction o f Boulder Dam to build a paved highway 33 feet wide, and 8 inches thick from

to Bah Fraactaco.

ADVANCE HALTED With tha German Army o f Oocu-

paUon in Sudetenland, (5et. 10. ~ (A P )—Tha German army today halted tts advance into Caecjio-

hAvlnar nrMtni*4i *11

Y,M,C,A. NotesToday:8:00-6:30—Buaineaa Men’a mwup. 8:80-9l0~ btermediata group

baaketbaU.840-10:8(^Y bowling iT^gin

Bannack, Mont— (A P )—A three- year-old child, playing on the banka of Grasshopper Creek with other children, fell In and waa be-ing swept awray. But Bobo, a mon-grel dog. dashed In. graaped the child 1 her drees and pulled her to the bawV

Several months ago Bobo was y m a atray dog. A Bannadi wom-an gave him a bom a hero.

Eden, former First Lord of tha A' mlraRy Alfred Duff Cooper and Winston Cburehin, flrat lord of tha admiralty during the World wrar — whom ha deaertbed aa "laftovara from VerMlUes.”

Tha axparlence o f tha past eight montha", ha said, "abowra we must strengthen our determination and ba cartful to leava nothing undona for our security and righta.

"Do Not Want Peaea""There are those abroad who do

not want peace. The conitrucUon of their states la such that men of peace can, at any time, ba sup-planted by others.

"Supposing after Chamberlain (Britlab prims miniater) there came Cooper or Eden or Churchill 7 They are men« who would like td: make war."

(Duff Cooper resigned aa first lord of tha admiralty Oct 1 aad Edan re-signed as fo rs i^ aecretary Feb. 30, both In disagreement with Cbamber- laln’a foreign policy. ChurchUl fre-quently has eritlctaed Chamberlain in the House of Commons.)

To Build More ForttflcatlaM "W e must therefore, always be

ready for peace but In , every hour prepared for defenee’’, he continued. ’I have, therefore, decided to con-tinue to build up Our fortlflcatlona with Increased inte'neity.

"1 will now include twro districts —Aachen and Saarbruecken—in the fortlflcatlona chain.

On the other hand, I am glad to be able to aay that certain measurea of security necesaary In thaae peat critical weeks and months will be readnded In the next few days.

"Rsservlsta wflU ba dtsoharged. I am happy to thank thara bera for what thay did."

Hitler spoke at a demonatratlon on Liberty field following the dedi- eatlon yesterday morning of the Saarland People’s theater which Propaganda Minister Paul Joseph Ooebbels described as ths most mod-ern In Germany. It la the chah- cellor’a gift to the Saar population in recognition of loyalty to Ger-many.

Ready for Understaadliig.:As a strong ataU," HItlar de-

clared. “we are now ready at any time for a policy of understanding.

"We want nothing of othera. Wc merely want peace.

"Thla la 'especially true o f our relations with Britain. It would be good, however, if In Britain cer-tain leftovers from Versalltea were discarded. We aimply cannot stand for a governeas-llke guardianship.

"Queatlona about events In Ger-many are out of place," ha eontin-ued. "W e don’t bother about Brit-ain's affairs either. We could, for Inatance, aak about Paleatlna. We leave them to thoae who think God haa called them to solve these prob-lems."

Then he declared:“All statesmen in tbe various

countries should mind their own business."

Halls Mimaoltnl as Friend.He hailed Premier Mussolini of

Italy aa . Germany’s "only real friend." although without mention-ing names he gave Chamberlain and Edouard Daladler, French premier, credit for efforts to maintain peace.

United States Consul Raymond H. Geist today obtained from CJerman authorities assurance that the gov-ernment order Invalidating Jews’ passport.a would not halt intending emigrants to the United States who had received American visas.

In conferences with the Gestapo (State police) and with the foreign-ers’ department of the regular po-lice. Geist obtained agreement that such passports would bo revalidated without further difficulty.

The minister o f the Interior Fri-day signed a decree declaring inval-id ail German passports in the hands of Jews living within the Releh. Jews were required to sur-render their paoSporta within two weelca.

Mm. Henry J. Laduc o f 43 Wood- bridge street entertained with a party and shower at her home Sat-urday evening for her daughter-m- law and son, Mrs. Jennie F. and Adalard J. Lieduc, whoae marriage took place on Monday, September 8, in Somers, Conn. The bride is the daughUr of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Berk of 39 Kerry street, aad waa formerly amployeo by tbe Under-wood Typewriter company in Hart-ford. Tbe bridegroom la with the Burr Nureery company..The young couple are maUag their home with the bride’s parents for the present.

They received a choice collection o f g l ^ from tbe 38 relatives and gueste who attended from New York, Woonsocket, R. I., Hartiord, Rockville, Somera and thla town.

DEATHS

AVERS ROADS HANDLE MORE

FREIGHT NOW(Onnttnaed frvni Page One)

wages were reduced, a general wage cutting campaign might sweep In-dustry.

Contends 1920 Not Fair YearIn croas examining Keller, J. Car-

ter Fort, chief of counsel for the railroads, contended that 1930 was not a fair base year for Keller’s study. He said that cost of opera-tion reached an all-time high during that year due to government con-trol.

Fort also criticized Keller for hot Including the first half of 1938 In his study, contsnding that his re- suIU might have been "quite differ-en t"

Questioning Keller on his conten-tion that savings brought about by more efficient operation of the roads bad not been, passed on to the ehip- pers or employes. Fort inquired who had received them.

"Don’t you know". Fort asked, "that the roads bavsn’t earned as much os 8 per cent on their capital except in one year since 19307"

Antonio Lonienzo Antonio Lamenxo, a native of

Italy, but a reeident' of ManchesUr for 82 yeare, died suddenly at his home I t Walnut street, Sunday noon. Bom in Italy .71 years ago he came to thik coimtiy 69 years ago and for a time was a restdent of Hartford. From Hartford be moved to Manchester, opening a confeo- Uoncry story in the Moriarty build-ing on Pine street shortly after It was erected. Five years later be purchased the property at Walnut pnd Pine atreet. He continued to conduct a atoro in this place. Later he built another store and dwelling to the east of the large building be first purchased and otherwlee en-larged his holdings in Manchester.

He disposed of hia businass in the store in 1913 and later entered tbe employ o f the Hartford Accidant and Indemnity Company o f Hart-ford, where he waa employed until his laat Illness.

He was an ardent baseball tan and has probably attended more World Series boMball games ttign any person In Manchester.

He waa one of the best known Italian realdenta of Manchester and held membership in tha Manchester Italian Club.

He is survived by Us ;wlfe, Mrs. Theresa Lamenzo; two sona, John B. Lamenzo of this place and Ralph W. Lamenzo of Hyde Park, N. Y.; three brothera, John Lamenzo of Hartford, Vincent Lamenzo of Italy. James Lamenzo of Windsor; a sla-ter, Mra Joaeph Salvatore of Man-chester and five grandchildren.

The funeral will be held from hla late home, .11 Walnut street, Wed-nesday morning at 8:30 and at St. Bridget’s church at 9 o’clock. Burial will be in Mt. SL Benedict’s ceme-tery, Hartford.

FUNERALS

PUBUC RECORDSExeentor’s Deed'

According to an executor’s deed re-corded today at the office of the Town Clerk, the Hartford-ConnecU- eut Trust company, acting as exec-utor of the estate of the late Wil-liam L. Buckland, haa sold North School street property belonging formerly to the eatau. to Alex and Mary Kaskay. Stamps indicate a value of $1,000 aa a conalderatton.

PermlteTbe office of the Building In-

spector haa Issued a permit to H. C.HuU ■ ' - ■'utchlnson of Bolton, who will build for Francis R. McCollum of 47 Ash-worth atreet a two atory, six room single dwelling with attached gar-age, to be located on lot 3. Porter street. Ck>st is estimated at $4,800.

A permit authorizing alterations to change a single dwelling located at 62 Pleasant street Into a two fam-ily house haa been issued to the Wennergren Construction company who will do the /work for Samuel McCurry of540 JUrnell place, the owner. CostHg^Uf^ated at $800.

Mra. Miohael Oormao.The funeral of Mra. Susan K. Gor-

man, widow of Michael Gorman, waa held this morning at 8:80 from her late home, 738 Main street and at SL Brldget’e church at 9 o’clock when a eolenm requiem high maze waa celebrated. Rev. Vincent Hlnea, azaletant pastor of SL James's church was the celkbrant. Rev. William p. Reldy, poator o f SL James's church was deacon and Rev. Frederick Clark, assUtant pas-tor of SL Bridget’s was sub deacon.

The bearers were WUter T. Gor- man, Thomas Holden, Samuel J. Kemp, Jr„ Michael F. Gorman, .Mathew Mulcahy aad Michael J. Gorman.

Aa the body was brought Into the church James Breen sang “ Lead Kindly U ghL" A t the offertory he sang "Ave Maria’’ and at the changing of tbe vestments he sang "There is No Room" and at the close of the mass he eaag "When Evening Comes.” A t tha recessional Mrs. Harold Garrity played (Thopln’s “Fimeral March.”

The burial waa In ‘st. Jamea’a cemetery. Rev. William P. Reldy reading the committal eervices.

m UER’SAIDE INVESTIGATES SERMON,RIOTS

UOcatlmiM| frern pagt> dns.)'

to keep moving on the opposite aide of the streeL There were no new dlaorders.

The Vienna propaganda mlnlotry remained silent on the InddenL tmt said a communique probably would be issued "one of these daya."

Cardinal Innitzer suffer^ a fore-head wotmd from a piece of flying glass as he knelt In hla private chapel during the rioL

Thrown From WindowA t the opposite end o f SL*

Stephen’s place, a group o f men in-vaded the second floor apartment of Canon .Tohann Krawanik, 60, and threw him from a window. He waa taken to a hospital with concussion of the brain, fractures and internal Injuries.

Canons reported gold and silver treasures of Cardinal Innitzer’s res-- Idence were atolen and other precious objecta either taken or ruined. One ehureh source said tha valuable Ubraty was in "zad condi-tion” and the church museum a heap of wreckage.

PROTESTS O tm tAG ERome. Oct. 10.— (A P )—L ’Ozaer.

vatore Romano, Vatican newspaper, today protested against the. "out- rageoua attack" made by a Viennese crowd Saturday night against the palace of Theodore Cardinal Innit-zer. archbishop o f Vienna.

A Vatican source Indicated that a report on "the motive of partlcu- larq of tbe violence" wae expected from the Papal nuncio at Berlin, MonsIgnor Cesare Opsenlgo.

The Vatican newspaper published a newt dispatch from Vienna on the Incident, having no official re-port from church authoriUea Vati-can circles said this was due to lack of Papal representation In Berlin. L ’Oaservatore Romano said:

"We raise our Christian and civil protest, expressing to ths archbish-op of Vienna sentiments o f sincere and profound condolence for the outrage caused to his person and in him to the rellgflon and church of ChrisL"

Ftmeral e f Infant Tbe funeral of the infant son of

Mr. and Mrs. Carl W'iganowskl o f 98 Center street, who died at tbe Man- cheeter Memorial hoepltal early Sun-day morning, was held this after-noon at 3 o’clock at the T. P. Hol- loran funeral home, 178 Center street. Rev. Karl Richter, pastor of the German Concordia church of-ficiated. The burial was in the E u t cemetery.

TALK IT OVER"RAYMOND E. BALDWIN

F O R G O V E R N O R

JAMES L. McCONAUGHTF O R L IE U T . G O V E R N O R

JOHN A. DANAHERF O R U . S . S E N A T O R

M ONDAYW TIG8:18 VM.

WBRY6:18 P.M.

W ICC7:30 PJkL

ONE ISSUE - ONE PLATFORM

/ < C i

want th t world to tee tk it p i c t u r t l . . .

BectuK with its Uoghter ■ad its tears it will eochsot . . . corapnire. . . eotcrtsla I

¥ourD a u g h t e r s

rRMCI A tAfa • lOIIMARY LAM LOLA lANI • CAU FAGI

OAUDI RAim • JOHN OAIMW JtrmY LYNN • DICK. fOMAN

m i Birwayira

T H U R S . - F R L • S A T .

STATITOWN ADVERTISEMENT

ASSESSORS’NOTICE

The inhabitants of tbe Town of Manchester liable to pay taxes are hereby notified and required to re-turn to the Assesaors on or before tbe first day of November nexL a Hat o f property owned by them on tbe first day o f October, 1938, and the Aseeesore will meet them for the purpose of receiving their list at the

Municipal BuildingOcL 8. 4. 8. 8. 7. 10, 11. U , 14.

17. 18, It, 20. 31, 34, 38, 86, 37, $8. 9 a. m. to 8 p. m.

Oct. 8let, Nov. 1st 9 a. m. to 1 p . ^

Satnrdays; 9 a. m. Jo 13 Noon,' Oct. 8, 18, 33. 19.

Owners of Aotomobllas « Motor- cycle* and TroUers ore requested to bring In Regiatratton of Oars.

RECOVEKT-niNU• r u u n n

ON ■M B U c ju ia

home, and now ho’a

Range and Fuel24 HOUR SERVICE

Telephone 3873

MORIARTY BROS., 301-315 Center St* Cor. Broad S t

Evening meetings am for tho eooi- venlsnoo of thoso who cannot eonto to the day sessions. Taxpayers am rcqnsstofl to c o o m lx tho d ^ Urns If possible and not crowd the ero- ning l eeelone.

Ihc-scrviee men having disabUity compensation rating file same with the Assessors before Nov. 1st, A ll lists of real estate must give boun-daries of the land, aa law re-quired, or they will not be aooeptad. Personns neglecting to attend to their lists on or before the first day o f November wlQ have ten per cent added to same. AU persons liable to give In lists of taxable property, real or personal, am urged to appear befom the Assesaors. Persons mak-ing out their lists wUl be obliged to maho oath and sign same. Persons ftUng Uata as agents for other per- seas must deelam under oath, that they have baen duly appointed agsnt and have fuU authority and knowledg* to file such VsL Blanka can be obtained o f the Assesaors, Town (Uerk and at the several Post Offices la town.

Ftonse Note: Nov. 1st Is the last flay.

EMU. L. O. BOHENTBAL. ML.ChoInBaii.

TIKMCAR J. LEWIE,■KNBV A. M U n iE .

DAILY RADIO PROGRAMM A w ca m T O z v ia n ir o g z a A iD . iiA w cH E sn a . o o h n : Mo n d a y . Oc t o b e r w , u m

MONDAY, OCTOBER 10 (Central-Ezitsm Standard Time—P.li )*" Corraclias.'

PREPARING PROOFS 0F H IE ‘'BIGBL0r

NBC-WEAF KREO) NETWORKPAtlC — Basti wmK waoc wua wjar wtaa wMh lirw wfbr wre" wsy wbSa wea. wtam wwj cbm wd.l; MlSw.tti

kpre wbre; p.elfici.

VB

Maunwmo wamb wjax ________kfl kaw kojno khq Itpo kru

OPTIONAL S T A T ^ n I (oper twchansMbly on .Ith.r RBD or n.tworki); Kast: wbra wcol wfaa «rlw w rk wck» wnl wwn chf cbl: Cantral: K S —iba witay ksbx kan. kalolum nrbow veoij iMbe wabr ngl Cfjrrwaun wlad wane wlto wwne woao ivava J53” -ky wfaa wbap araol kth.

•••q.»kbh weco arabt kaej .Y.blb liBlo kdaki^aoa wims

ETS! Mauntalni kwirSfblJItar kobjurhf.kldo Iqifa kaal kiPaaifla: kfbk ksw kml kern ksu kmad Cant. taat.4*10 - liSO Jack Arin.trons — aaat: . Tha R ^ h Oaya In Vaaala—waat ♦>4»— •:4^Llttla Orahan Annia—

aeatj U fpoy Jaak’a iansa—waat*ba Nawa5!l»— t:t^Maiaalm Claira’a Starlaa

a N»wa Parladf l i t " eijf—Ta *a Annaunaad (1» m.) t ' J t *"4 ton, Sarlalw*2rr. A"4» — a..t:- Ceneart Xnaam•>1^- TiW—idwin C. Hill

' 7iS0—Xmily Paaf*>t: Te Sa Annaunaad |:C9—Al Paarea am

Cammant Pragram—

_ ---------—westi ^ -- Faarea and Oana•!|^AIfrad Wallanatain Oi » : ^ P h l l Sj

7:00- i;?‘IV— f 'S —Alfrad W'allanatain 0roh

• J‘5^Fhll Spitalny Olrla—to .*>£—Eddy Duehin Orah.—tol i s t ___________ ____ __________

No. 1—wart only10.0(^11:00—Olek Todd, Song—aaat:

" Andy—w..t repeattolllnl Bnaambla

J9[?^11'J^Ai Oonahua ^Orehattra 1J *5?'—31 Si 1*0 Mattara Orehartra 11:*0“ 1«!l0—Xirl Hinaa and Orehaatra

CBB-WABC NETWORK•ASIC'— tostl wabo wads aroko wcao araei wgr wkbw wkre wjr wdro wcau l i l * MIdwaal:wbbm wfbm kmbO kmoa whas kfab krnt

41a kob k.1 kiiro kfbb COAST—knqz kotn kol kfpy krl kafe koy karm khlw kirmb-lirap ku« kgar Cant KaaL1SS~ »:0O-Nlla Maeh Lat’s Prttand

»:*0—National Hillbilly Champ. 4:4}— 0:4IL-Cireua Story—aaat; Hill. . J?'"*!. Champlona, Csnilnuad-watt j : 0 ^ 0;0^Preaa.Radle Nawa Period •:0»-_S:0»:-ad Tbarnraan, L m rlt-

“ " ^gln

Local Residents CoDect Pic-tures And Other Data To Hand Their Descendants.

. .pabc: Rhythm Roundup- ____•:1|“ Oils—Chlaaso’a Santa Par You

Trout About “Today •'40—-0i4B—To Sa Annaunaad (It m.) •'00— 7:00—Sane, by Ray Haatbartan

.•''.O” 7:^^Lum.Abner Skalcb—basic Cantor*g0 '^ ^ 7:IO-addia

I 'O ^ O'S^Tha Disk Himbsr Shew and-Pat, Pun—basic7 :10- t:SO-Plak i..

B:00- •:0O-Radla

O.^O^t'.wbna WPS whp wheo wore efrb ekao wibz wmaa we.s whbf wlba wkbn *!>l<> jrSbl wbrk wnbx OIXIK — wgat wafa wqam wdod kira ^ a o wUe wwl. wtoc krid ktrh ktpa waeo koma kdbo wbt wdaa wblg wdbj

waje wmbr ktu| wcoa wdne wnoa HWKh know wmmm wjno wcha wpar

wrY» walm wfdw wapl MIOWXST — wmbd artsn wibw Itfb

I SSZJa'.fcrSJ'**'"* ’ '"O Walts—to e *'*v7l? '*lrTo, *0 Annaunaad—aaat; ,n ni^dla Cantor—waat raptat

■uaaa OrehaatW.I*^11:S0—Dick Barrla’a Orehaatra 11:00—11:00—Ran Wilde • Orehaatra 11:10—11:80—Little Jatk Little Orehaa

NIC-WJZ (BLUE) NETWORK ■ASIC — Xtati wja wbs-Wbta wbal * "• " * “ to w»y» wJtn wayr wmal will jaby w.br clef whk wmff w .^ wuin wIcc wlau; Mldwaati warn- wla kwh boll wian wmt kM> wowo kma wotn; South i wrtd wmpa w)bo wdsu arasa wagn

4lo kirod: Paelba: kgo Kl^ktma ktx ^ keca kjr NOTX: 8m W iA P-NSC for eptlanal ■lit of .tatlona Cant. BasL4:80— S:80^Oan WIntlaw ef Navy— . Cbarlaa taara, Toner—wartliaSZ Sinfell*'" ••‘•lah-aaet. To St Annaunaad5:?9~ Orehaatra0.40— S:«--Lawall Thamat - aasti

' - III’**.'’ "tan, taprana—watt0'0<^ 7:00—Allaa Jimmy Valentina—

aaat: Mualmi Prasrama—waat ! Ta'*"‘ WantaS—Pros.!'4|tT J’lS~P'**blad Vatarana Ttikt 7:00— 0:00—Carson Reblnaon Sueba*fOOSa.'SH .'nSr^Ttoto Wa Leva'*—TO eat

■• Annaunaad (80 m.) fl!P~,!'JS;-Taik by So il Vtndanbars J:?®“ 3®'0^Dr. Hasan True or Palaa

,S‘JP"*39’JS“ H**'®"*' Forum I5 St!!33‘Sfc'2*'l!.*> toul Kain Orah.

AIrsady residenU of ths hurrican* areas In New England are preparing data on the great blow to hamj down to their descendants, just aa they did a half century ago about another great storm—the blizzard of '88.

However, In thlz latUr cataa- trophe great loss of life and prop-erty resulted over a widespread area, much the same area that was affected by the storm, of 80 yeafaH i

'niouaands of pictures of the storm damage have been taken and the descendants of present residenu will have concrete evidence of the

*’ *‘"*'” A®** flood, something wee almost entirely lacking* In

0O(

Anhoune«d (10 m.) 11:0^13t0^To §• Anruuinetd (16 m.)11:80^12i80^toR«rnty Orchtetre

WTICB errios,Ttovslsrs Braofloosttng

Bartforfl. Goon. S0J)00W. 1040 K.O. .38.3N.

Boatom Btanflarfl Ttans.

Monday, OcL 10p. m.4:00—Backstage Wife.4:18—Stella DaHas4:80— "Life Can Be Beautiful"4:48—Girl Akme8:00—"DIek Tracy"8:18—"Your Family and Mine"8:80—"Jack Armstrong"6:45—"Little Orphan Annie”8:00—News and Weather 0:10—MalMlm Claire 0:80—Wrlgbtvllle Clarion 8:45—"Jack Bays, Ask Me Anothor" 7:00—Amos 'n* Andy 7:15—"The Human Side of the

News’’—Edwin C. HUl.T:80—"Inside of Sports with Jack

Stevena"7:48—Talk auspices Democratic

State l^ t r a l Ckimmlttee.8:00—AI Pearce and his Gang 8.80—Alfred Wallenstein’s Orches-

tra0:00—“Hour of Charm” with Doro-

thy Thompson, commentator.0:80—IMdle Duehln’s Orchestra 10:00—Contented Program 10:30—Guy Hedlund and Company. 11:00—News and Weather 11:18—Adrian RotUni and hla or-

cheatra,11:80—Al Donodiue’e Orchestra.12:00—Top Hatters13:30—Eari Hines’ orchestra.1:00 a. m.—Silent.

Tomorrow's Program 0:00 a. m.—Reveille with Jake and

Carl

i i : i 8 -rHenry Busse'a Orehaatra. 11:80—Count Basle’s Orchestra. 13:00—Ron Wilde’s orchestra.13:30—Littls Jack Uttls's orchss-

1*A-T imso it o w ’s Program.

A. M.7:00—Shoppers Special.7:48—News Service.8:00—Shoppers Special.-9:00—R ic^ rd Maxwell.0:18—Montana Slim.9:33—News Service.9:80—Girl Interne—Joirce Jordan.

^9:48—The Old Counselfor.10:00—Pretty Kitty Kelly.10:18—Ue On a Bus.10 r45—Stepmother.11:00—Dorothy Stone— Console varieties.11:15— TTie Rhythmalres.11:30—Big Slater.11:48—Aunt Jenney’a Real

Stories.12:00—Kate Smith.P. M.13:18—Her Honor, Nancy James 12:30—Romance of Helen Trent. 13:48—Our Oal Sunday.1:00—Newe S e^ce.1:15—WDRC String Ensemble —

Joseph Blume, Dir.1:30—Strictly Swing with GU

Bayek.

Remain As Mementeee" “ A* beep learned that several

rMidentk Intend to kllow MvenU of their larger trees to remain on the ground OS further evidence that the storm waa not just p freak wind but a real hurricane.

A battle Is already on among the rtwm g material agencies regarding which type of roofing material stood up the best under the gale. Tin roof- Ing affected in many InaUncee. the wtod lifting at exposed corners the e n ^ roof, some buUdera claim inat the old-fashioned wooden ^ in - glee e ^ the teat bettor than all

klnda, while dealers in fabri- c a t^ ahlMlea laud the adhesive qualities of their product,

^rpentore, brick masons, and ***** etoady work for

aimoet three weeks whUe elactri- clans are at a premium and will be for weeks to come.

U TH E PikPER ISSUED BY METHODIST dURCHESThe Mentor” Mokes Ita

peorance: ^ Be Pat Once Each Mm

DALADIER’S PARTY LOSES ELECHON

lon th .

The flmt issue o f the "Mentor” (the South Methodist parish news-paper) is now In circulation. 'Diia paper U issued once a month, and i* •ditad Rnd publltfhtd (In mlmgO" graph forni) by Misa Ann Strick-land. asalstod by Mrs. Bernice Chap-pell, who ia reaponalble for items concerning the North Methodist church.

Also Faces Growing Demand For Referendum On For-eign Policy Issues. r »

The aim of jthla littls paper ia to develop an interest In the various church activities, and to invito new membership. It Is sponsored chiefly by the Wesleyan Guild, assisted by a few private subecrlptlons, and the loose collections taken at the door on the day of loeue.

The Mentor hae a circulation of about 300 this year. Thla Includes both the south and north churches. Them Is also a mailing list of about 38. Including former church mem-bers, or postons, who are now liv-ing out-of-town. Three go to friends abroad—on* to England, one to Switzerland, one to C:hlna.

Meeting NottoeeThe paper contains notices of

coming church evento, also regular meetings o f the church clube. Thereis a hymn story la each issue, aadoomment* on current evento from a religious viBwpolaL A column of •oclal items, births, marriages aad memoriamsV pays tribute to the

vital aUUstlea of tbe parish.Occasionally an open letter

comes In from abroad, or from some local member who he* traveled ro- cently.

An effort is being made ibi* year I to contact those who am confined to their homes by lUneas, Or old age, so that they might keep In contact with the church acUvltlea aad their friends ia the pariah through the Mentor, which la either malted to them, or delivered personally.

RADIO DayEoetoni Standard Tlmo.

New

Overnight News

O f ConnecticutBy ASSOUATRO PSEBS

Life

York, Oct. 10—The annual b ri^cast for the moblllzeU-m for human needs has been set for Frl-

******* ** o’clock via NBC, CBS and MBS. ’

President Roosevelt la to speak from toe 'White House, and Cnoii^ nmn Ctoylee P. Taft also wlU be hMrd. MualcBl Interludes ere by the Cincinnati symphony orehaatra directed by Jose Iturbt.

1:45—The Gospel Singer— Eidward b.MacHugl

3:00—Irene Beasley, R. F. D. No. 1 3:10— Harry Cool aad the Har-

monettea.3:80—American School of the air. 8:00—Adventures In Rhythm.3:30—Four Clubmen.3:48—Melody Ramblinga.

In the football list on the net- ®“ *“ *^*y *■ O'* Notre DMe-IUinoU game at South Bend,

ind. • . , tho flfth world coocort uh» .*** ‘ **A ‘ntornaUonai

broadcast union comes October 23 on all networks. Canada will pre-sent it . . . Warden Lewis E.

J*** AATento aeries of dramaUc bcoadcasto about crime, to

"'® **** * ‘ * «>ver WJZ-NBC, On October 31.

6:80—"Sunrise Special" Watch7:00—Morning

8:OOr-News and Weather S:18-ABradley Kincaid 8:80—Radio Basaar 8:48— "Jane Arden’

sketchdramatic

9:00—MUlnr Way food F0:18—Food News

0:80—Omtehen McMullen 9:48—"Vic and Sade"10:00—Mrs. Wlggs of the Cabbage

Patch .. •10:15—John’s Other Wife 10:80—Just Plain BUI 10:48—The Woman In White 11:00—David Harum 11:15—Lorenzo Jones 11:80—"Young Widow Brown" 11:48—"The Road of U fe "12:00 noon—Beauty Newe and Hints 13:18 p. m.—“HUltop House" 13:80—"Myrt and Marge"13:45—"Slngin* Bam"1:00—i.News; Weather 3il8—Voice of the Farm .1:80—"Words aad Music"1:48—HI Boys 3:00—"Over the Footlights'

lake and Carl -Medical Talk

R ^ MarJorie MiUs, the Girl from

8;0O-Ths St'

HAWAU NIOITS FEATURE AT HARTFORD’S STATE

8:25—Ma PerkinsJ '^ P jP P o r Young’s Family 8:48—"Tho Guiding Ugbt”

WDRG33$ Raitforfl, Conn. iggo

Eastern Staaflarfl Thne.---------- ------ ^

/

P. M. * ******H »^ »«® 6«r 10.4^00--Patt^na in Swing.

2 : i2r ? ? f ^ ? * p p y oilmans.J?*'" iAn. songs.

0.0D—(A(] Liner.HUIbUly Cham-

***EhtF Show.,SAfVlce.

8:18—Republican SUto Oommltte* R w rte r .”

Sob TrouL0.48-jtongs for You—Shirley Sad-

7:00-i-Howle Wing.TdHwi a&d Abcier.

7:80"^Sddia Cantoi^a < van.To he announced.

8; l^ M o o d a y Night Show.8.30—Pick and Pat, In Pipe Smok-

ing Ume.9:00—Lux Radio Tbeatar.

g jV Lombardo’s Orchestra. Story of tbs Song.

ll:0(^Newa Servtca.

"Hawaii Night” , the Hawailan- American Extravaganza now at the State theater in Hartford for three days will transplant Lbe miUlona of theatergoers, who cannot take the advantage of a cruise, kt least for the duration of the performance, to tbe famous beach of Waikiki, Dia-mond Head, ML Pele and other points of Interest of tha Hawaiian Islands, peopled with a company of Native aad American , players. Hawaii Nights takes you to these different point* of Interest and out-standing among the twelve elabor-ated Bcenee la the authentic ritual ceremony o f toe human sacrifice to

Pete enacting the legend of these people throe hundred yearn ago when the lovely Princess Luano, daughter of the high priest, gave herself th supreme sacrUlee so that her beloved Islands should be spaired destruction by the burning and hlrtng lava of ML Pele’s erupUons.

^•tontag tonight (Monday); talks —WJZ-NBC 9:30, Sen. A. H. Van dentorg ••^e a^cultural altus' tlon"; WOR-MBS 10. Sec. Harold *• to}*** At SL LouU; WJZ-NBC 10:30. Radio forum, Francis R. WU CM, ‘Relief Needs and Farm Sur-pluses."« *??*J?“ * WEAF-NBC8, A l Pearce Gang; WJZ-NBC C a t i^ Robinson BuckarooaW a ^ - C 3 S 10, Guy Lombardo or-chestra.■W ^F-NBC — 8:80 Richard

^uf**** ®P‘ toIny girls; 0:80 Eddy Duchln orchestra; 10 Marek Wsber concert.

W a BC-CBS— 7 :S0 Eddie Cantor

show. 8:30 Pick and Pat; 9 Radio Theater "Viva VlUa."

WJZ-NBC—7 Alias ^Immy Vai- ?******iS\?/®® Those Ye LOve; 10 TrueoperT^ ' ’ ®***

Whai NBi ebu;Mine/thewoe

to expect Tuesday; WEAF- :48 p. m. Hymns o f all

Tour Family and WA^?-GBS—2:80 School of ■ ofwnlng week; 3 Buslneas

ins discussion; 4 Rep. Wright ra "Absentee ownership of

5:30 Orocen week pro-D‘A8 YMCA Founders

This scene for sheer realiimi has ®S,” ^®_AnU-MonopoIy — ----- ' YMCA Founders ~never been surpassed on the staxe founders Day; 4 ]

The fifty naUve and American bud- W J Z ^ d N. Y.liners combine their talents to TO-Yf Thomu E. t W e y ci"HawaU NlghU” the meet outstand-

Hour, 1.80 Sen. Joe. C. O’Mahoney • Bill;” 2:48

National State—

campaign

ingly dlfferrat stage p resen ta tl^ u I a**®E! w avu : 2ROtour In many y e a r s ^ I ^ m e 7:30 p. m. Tuesday sym-

The “Sacriflclal Dance", executed Commentsby I ^ c e u Luano. descendant of 081 GSDRoyM Hawaiian blood, U performed Ixmdon 30: ^ Bach organM Bhe was Uught the dance bv her I “ "torL ' rmother, former dancer o f the court o f the late Empreu UU. last of the Royal rulers of the Hawaiian Is. Im (1s . All the modern pamphernalla » * * t o ^ cm fL from lighting effect* to tricky,In chemistry, m m bsu p rov ld^ by the V r o d u ^ « "HawaU Nights", to make tha

* «T * * * * “ ******> to the gods of the Volcano, a memorablt stage presentation.

New Haven—Dean Norman 8. 1 Buck announced that Yale freshmen

.**•*• * eduuUonalaptitude teats OcL 13 and IS to meaaure their ahUlty u students, In place o f toe regular claesrcMm exer- c lou

Hartford—A number of concerns about tbe state will award prism to employm avoiding automobile accl- denU and driving without commit-ting traffic vlolatloBs In a series of contesU starting Nov. 1. The con-tests. supported by Gov. WUbur L. Crou and toe highway safety com- mleclon; wUI involve employm’ care, rather than the drivers. ,

New Haven—Prmldent Charlm Seymour announced toe appoint-ment o f James T. Babb of New Ha-ven aa assistant Ubrarian at Yale University, effective at once. Other upolntmenU Included Prof. Hans Kurath of Brown University aa vis-iting professor o f German lingula- ties '

New London—Gov. Wilbur L. I Croae paid New London a eurpriae visit and probably would have gone enUrely unnoticed if Sergeant John J. Ciavanaugh hadn’t begun straightening out a traffic Jam in which the chief executive's car waa tangled. They went together to Ocean Beach to survey hurricane damage.

Waterbury-Frank W. Brodle, 8g, I prmldent of Rbq^ and Boyd, Inc., and of the Connecticut Insurance Plnsnce Company of tola city, died suddenly in New York Saturday. He wae a resident of Watertown.

EDWARD FRAZIER PICKED AS MARSHAL OF PARADE I

To Select His Aide* For Annla- tlce Day Event At Commit-1 tee Meeting Tonight.

Edward Frasier, ebairmaa o f the I Permanent Armistice Day Commit-tee, a delegate from the Monchee- ter YDVA, aras selected os Marehal of the Armistice Day parade by the special committee o f members I selected for that purpose at the lost mmtlng of tho group. J

Confirmation o f the appointment of Marshal Frazier wUl be*^ven by the committee In seeaion at the I

^ Navy club this evening at

Moreb^I- e 4rtU aclect hisalijm for tbe annual Armistice D*y parade at tonight’s meting.

CURB QUOTATIONS I

Camel Cara-

By ASSOCIATED PRESSAm a u Pow and Lt B ......... guArk Nat G a a ............... PAsad.oas and El A \

Omt SUtes E l ........................SJ* S*” .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

y*i ^ **” . . . . . . . . .

Unit U and* ^ * A ....... i

J o s e p h M .T O N £

According to sdeaUats tha w n heart controeu 100,000 t dolly.

T o n i g h tWICCWTIC

— 6 u i5

- - 7 :4S

Parle, Oct. lO - (A P ) - Premier Deladler’a Radical Socialist party lost iu flret election since the Mun- Ish peace and faced a growing de-mand today for a national referen-dum on toe issue of foreign pollclm.

A Radical Independent, Pierre Maaae, won the senatorial aeat from Herault Sunday, defmtlng hla ^ d lca l Socialist opponent 463 to

j' A Radical Socialist previously nad held the aeat.

The calla for dlasaoIuUon o f the ttoamber of Deputlm and a general election to determine the will of the prople came from representatives of all factions..

®nledler Reported Ix Favor Premier Daladler himself has

been reported In favor of asklnx a popular mandate for hla shift In

to^ ffn policy toward- cooperation with Germany and Italy.

Deputy Georges Potut echoed that Idas at a party raUy yeatorday at Neveys. Hla waa the flrat open call for dlasolution of tha chambar by raembert of the Radical Socialist party.

A declaration by Senator Paul Maullon that the senate would give Daladler an "Immehee m ajority was considered signifleant to poliu. cal observers.

Maullon Is a member of the Demo- crMIc loft, tho Sonate majority

The constitution provides the president can dtaaolve the Hhambei of Deputies only with con-sent o fthe Senate.

Commiiniats formally have de- mahdod dlasolution. while the Social- lata, -atlll noncommittal, are grow- li^ dally more hostile to Daladter's efforts to settle differences with lUIy, even at the coat of an Insur-gent victory in the Spanirii civil

■The official oigan of the Socialist

eve; while negotiations were und^r way '’Ocncr^l Pranco'g m v « ages of the air resumed their aerial bombardment.’’-'The newspaper car-ried the atory of an attack on a Spanish government railroad train, with ISO reported killed and 800 wounded.

A dwiding factor in toe Socialtat stand likely will be action taken during a two-day meeting of tha

National Commlttae c f the poww- ful leftist General Confederation o f labor, which llaU 5,000,000 wether members.

Sessions Were called for today and tomorrow to study the new poUUcal mtuatlon created slnee partition of Sf.‘u'**.°.."'°''“ **'*’ ’'’’Wch Daladler.ri!?tJ**,* P’’*” '**’* of Great Britain end Italy, agreed in coneultatlon atS ' H U I m . chanceuor.

p°®^*<l«r*Uon, not itself a politick party, is linked closely with troth ComunisU and SoclalisU in to People's Front coalition.

FRIENDS BRING GIFTS FOR MRS. JAS. COUTURE

Miscellaneous Shower In Hon-or Of Bissell Street Reoi- dent; Social Evening Enjoyed

**;* ’ ******'“ «h<»wer In honor ..“ r* ^“ "*** Couture of Bie-

mu 1*/®**’ **** Mlaa EdithElliott, was held Saturday night at the home of her aunt, Mrs C 8 Barlow of Hamlin atreet. A Urm number of friends were 'from this town and

OFFICERS O BTAU IDBY EPWORTH LEAGUE

Seated At Sooth Chordi Union Mcdting; Evdyii la Speaker Of The

A t

present, , . - — Hartford andMre. Couture received many lovelv and useful gifts. ^

m f " 1* was enjoyed and abuffet lunch we* served.

_ T h e tastalhltlon of coiden at the Bpwortb f isegue, took placa loot evening In a unlM meebng'a t the Leaguejud Evening service, at the South Church.

The fcrtlowtng cdRcecs wesn aaot- ed:

PresIdenL Ernest Tbompaoo.

Srd vtce president (Social estvins - lo c a l) Mlie Alice m S ooT

4th vtca president (Recreational-. social) E d ^ A O t t a i o ^ ^ ^

Treasurer. WllUam Glenney.Secretary, Mae WaddaU. PianIsL MaPlanleL Margamt Atktnaon.The speaker of the evening waa

Beer, who divided her

of hor trip to Oolorsdo Mid Mcottd. s report i>f the Youth '"Vinferenae '

ot the UatvOr-•Ity of Colorado this loot euauBer.

NaUvea of Timbuktu hoO eat hippopotamus Bteakai wllh 1 two Inches thick IM traT

3 Piece Walnut Bedroom Suite

$99.50Rdtalhr Price I14SJ0

Suite eonaldt of full alao bed~seven-dratwr vanity, with large

withcircular mirror—dud chest eedar wardrobe and desk. Thiee J»rB« draweie, Beentlftallr fln-

quality suite—st « M4.00 aaring.

M apleCricket Chairs

$6.75Regular price is $7.96.

TTiese are Ideal bedroom chairs—in assorted cover-ings and colora.

KEMPWinir or Morrig

Chair in SoUd Maple

$15.95Two atyles of *hnlri

three cholM of covera. A $21.00 chair guaranteed to Five you real corafoit.

GenuineSIMMONSInnerspriiig Mattress

$ 1 6 . 5 0coil innerspring mattress 1by the

makers of the Beautyrest mattress. A 3 ^ quality mattress that will gi^« you the utmost in comfort Ckivered In dur- •bte striped ticking. We have them in f ^ and half sizes, and you will be saving $8 if you buy now!

Solid Mahosrany Top

$5.95A fine qudity' end table

similar to above^pieture— but with full tumihgi on logs. A table you can use in a number of places. Regu- htfly $7.60.

$ 19.95Cedarpeat which regulariy seHs

for $26.60. Hand rubbed walnut finish—attrac-***™*o" o«® designed cabinet.

e h e r tl^ ^ “ delivery and save $7.00 on thla fineBuy now

$6.50A 80 bookcaas with four

shelves, three adjustal^ Finished in mahogany. A splendid value as regular price ia $7.96.

f ur nitur e RADIOS f r igidair es MUSIC

Rod0D

il " H■Ro«

TYw, aRock) on Sii

tag U of 1S( moBtl of Ban being woma The « Oonie otten( large Uie m

Rev Green Value avUhStrvio E SU “Oodi forme tende(

Her aemln eount; lowlnt eral o . The o’ctoci

vsne I was bCoUIn ton of who h

Ho t Sprini Roekv forthi Inir th

FoU Uns w where Sherill tire me happtr the de aer at

A o oppoii: Iw t e of Son iQgton

Mia Brook and E Injure: aht w third I the gr felling •be fel

Dr. •d and the in; Bortfi put in

Edv tyn. f dleo o ness. A w t ui and N war a years cloth

Re McLe: ters, I T. M. Calif.; ord 5 of Ro<

The day t' tol sei dav a Elllnj; Georj) Union city. 1

Tile wUi h ning Btrout the pr nlciiin

The lliary V. F. ' the G.

The J ’.. Da Waite thia cl of Mr Mcridi mornlj ri>urrl Quinn

The by her Mrs. 1 bride, othy I J Moi Uanr, Qeorc:< were fon a

A n eerem

' parent ■ d'ng t

Uieir ’ sttmt, at hor

The memb tion b on 8s hoi Ir of thlionpobCnrandoactlc

Am M m 1 Motra staff.

Page 5: RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR 'LIES' ABOUT AIR ...

•IAM f:H K M rK K E V E N IN G H E R A LD . M A N in iB R TE R . CONNu M O N D X T, OCTOBER 10.1988

ISfews From Manchester’sth A lm B m t

c* l iftr «e tiM>. atth t

PERSONS PRESENT AT OLD FOLKS’ SERVICES

Km.M l pnm

HIGHLANDPARK

ANN STRICKLAND 8679. MMChMt«r

Tb« Highland Park OirU' club will hold Ita meeting thia evening at 7:30 p. m. U there are UghU at the

B h M ri

m. . ^ mm • M vloltn loloa by Max Rabrlck; vocalR o d n ^ I f e n a f f i f t ConrcD AbbeyIM m T M C mBimmumx There ’••ere re-

_ f I V . I D ' freehmenU eeri-eC during the eve-, < •»« v- »“ • " « * « " **a"« »>■ ••“ «r r M M M iC S ta rU T ! K€T. in l^ , and dancing woe enjoyed. Oa- club houae, It will take place there.V fV W M /, 's' «>• tol» m. l e ___ L - - 1| I general committee with Mra. RuthUr* S t i f y t T M C M f A t {McKlnctiy Cooley In charge of the

er.tertainment. ar.a Mra. ideesle Price

Hie Afternoon Senke.

- Bockvine, OcL 10. — (Bpedal.l— Hie anmml Old Polka Sunday of the Roekvflle Methodist church waa held on Simday memlne with a large at-tendance. The oldest person attend-ing the service waa Charles B. Reed of 134 Orove street, who was a few months older than WlUlam Metcalf oil 13m atreet who also attended, both being 81 years of age The oldest woman present was Mrs. Ell Carver. The oldest member of the church, Daniel Presbrey. 90. was unable to attend the services, and waa sent a targe botiquat of flowers following the m o m ^ ssrvleea.

Rev. Ira LeBaron. headmaster of Greenwich Academy, spoke on "The Value of the Church In Our Modem Chrniaatlon". At the Home Coming asrvloe In the afteraoai. Rev. Eiarl B. Story of Manchester cpoke on “God Speaks to the Church”. Many former members of the church at-tended the aervice.

Named for SherMfHarvey S. CoU'ns of Columbia was

ncmlnatkl for sheriff of Tolland county by the Repuldlean Party fol- lowlng a convention which found sev-eral contests.

The convention opened at 11 o’clock in the morning, but It was ■aceasary to call a recess and recon-vene before the final deciding vote was taken. On this final vote, Mr. Collins defeated Predarlck O. Vin-ton of Eagteville, the preaent eherlff Who has been sheriff for 34 years.

Harold C. Bruce of Stafford Springs and Herbert Krause of Itecirvllla who were also candidates for the nomination, withdrew preced-ing the convention.

PoUpwlng hla nomination, Mr. Col- Bns was aacortcd to the convention where be eapreeaed the wish that Sheriff Vinton would have in his re- tirsment many years of health and happiness. Mr Collins then Invited the delegates to be his guests at din-ner at the Rockville House.

A committee for the county waa Mpolnted consisting of Robert B. fw te of Hebron, R. Leland Keeney of Somers and Arthur Spicer of WUI- iQgton.

Pen r'rom WindowMlsa Alvina E. Tennstedt, 21, of 1

Brooklyn street, daughter of Albert and Emma Tennstedt was seriously injured Saturday afternoon. While aht. was cleanlrig a window on the third atoiy of her home ehe fell to the ground, larding on her fcet'and felling back. It was eatimated that abe fell about 35 feet.

Dr. Donald M. Beckwith was call-ed end because of the eertousness of the Injury, ordered her taker tc the Hartford hospital where she has been put In a cast.

Edwin L McLeanEdwin L Mclean, 70. of Brook-

lyn. N. formerly of Rockville, died on Sunday following a brief Ill-ness. He was bom In Ellington. Aurmst 9, ISCS. the son of Robert and Martna (MlUsop) McLean. He war a res'dent of Brooklyn for many years and was a jobber of woolen cloth In New York.

Re leaves his wife, Mrs. Madge A. McLean, of Brooklvn, N. T.; four sis-ters, Mrs. L. M. Ste'bbins and Mra. T. M. Gardner, both of San Diego. Calif.; Mrs. .George B. Hammond and Mrs. Mattie M. Merrick, both of Rockville.

The funeral \/Ul be held on Tues-day evening In Brooklyn. Commit-tal services will be held on Wednes-day afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Ellington Center cemetery. Rev. George S. Brookes, pastor ol the Union Congregational church of this city, will ofilc'ate.

MentingsTlie Italian Ladles Social club

will -hold a grocery social this eve-ning at the clubhouse on Sntpalc Btrc.t for their membera and friends, the proceeds to be used towards fur- nlciUnga for the new clubhouiie.

The portnOned meetirg of the Aux-iliary of Frank Badatuebner Post, V- P. tv.,will oe held this e\"enlng In the G. A. R. hall at 8 o'clock.

Moran-DaviaThe marriage of Mlsa Catherine

3 Davis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Davis of Ellington avenue, 'this city, to John L Moran. Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John L Moran, of Meriden, took place on Saturday morning at St. Bernard's Catholic church with the Rev. Edward J.Quinn officiating.

The bride was given In marriage by her 'father. The attendants were Mra. Leonard Neumann, slater of the bride, as matron of honor; Miss Dor-othy Escherieh. as bridesmaid; I.«on J Moran as ■'>e5t man. Uabars, WU- Itanr. Preuas, James Gihney and George Davis. The* flower girls were Susan and Patricia Commer- fon of Middletown.

A reception was held following the ceremony at the home of the bride's parents. The couple left for s wed- d'ng trip istcr in the day and upon their return will reside st 37 Park

' stteet, this city, where they wtll be St horns after November 1.

Many At ReoepUas There waa a large, attendance of

m m ten and gu e^ at thetkm held by Hope Cbaptei, O. E on Saturday evening In the Town hat in honor of Cbaries H. Leonard of this dty. who has recenUy been sppainted Grand Sentinel of the Gnnd Lodge, Eastern Star of Con- BsetlcUL

Among those In sttendsnes was Mm Maude. T. Bjdea, Worthy Grand

iMatran of the Eastern Star, and her

sBtests^nBMnt'

at the boros of Mrs. LUUs Millar on Gardner street.

I The Ladles’ Sewing Circle will hold Its regular meeting on Wednesday.

In chargs of the Invitations.Fimrral ^

The lunersl « Henry B. Taylor,! g7 for the past three years s ’.utlent; ,St ths Rocki^U Convklescent Home, i«vh« <u»d lata Saturdav nisht. was ffi*ffib*rs te present. An InvltsUonwho died late Saturday night, was, hell this afternoon at the Luclna , “ tended to all the ladlM In the Memorial Chapel In Grove HUI cem- community to join thU club. Sev- etery. Rev. Dr. George 8. Brookes. new families have moved Into pastor of the Jnlon Congregational i the Park In the lost season, and this cnurch. offlelated. Burial was In club Is ons way In whtcb the ladles Grove HUI csmetely.. ’ rosy be^me acquainted, and get tn-

Mr. Taylor '\*as bom In Jltaton- j to the cbmmunlty activities, bury and lived here as a young man,later spending many years traveling. He leaves no known relatives.

I Adjoamfd MeetingThe adjouixed town meeting wUI

bt held this evening at 8 o'clock atthe Town haU. This la ths meeting which was adjourned from last week because ths printed town reports were not ready fo. distribution.

Thera are two matters to coma up bifore the mestirg, ths hearing of th-i town ren''-tn and the acting upon ti em and the adoption of the Select- mer’s budget for the year.

At the Octobei meeting of U)e RockvUle Civic Araoclatlon, a resolu- Uop was adopted eall'ng for the Se-lectmen of the town of Vermn to make public the aimual budget at least two weeks In advance of each annual town meeting Ip ordei that the people the town may have an opportimity to study the budget be-fore being called upon to vote on It at the anru'nl n'eetlng. It Is ex-pected that this resolution wU. be presented before- the town meeting toi.lght.

WAPPINGMRS W W GRANT

8809. Mancheeter

The next meeting of the Well Child Conference will be held at the WappIng Community Church House, next Friday afternoon, from 1 to 3 o'clock.

Mr. and Mrs. Truman C. Hills and lltt’s daughter, attende-.l a family Tatbering at the Bristol home in Canton the last of the week.

The next meeUng of the Economic Forum wUI be held Thursday eve-ning at the East Room of the Wap-pIng Community CLurch Houce. The discussion v/tll be on "Should Labor Be Allowed to Organize” ?

Services st the WappIng Com-munity Church yesterday morning were as usual. Rev. Doug'as V. .Mc- Uean took Tor his theme, "The Christian Is Different". Tlie Young People's meeting was he'd at 7 p. m. In the East Room of the Community Houfe.

The Rev. Daniel T. Streeter preached at the Wlndsorvll’e Metho-dist church rervicc st 11 a. ni. Sun-day on the topic; "As A Tree Grows'.,, The Church school met as usual at 10 oclock -‘V.-Uh a story In addition to the regular lessons. A B'rd- ITouac- Church was shov.'n the chil-dren.

ADVERTISEMENT—Private Instruction In typing and

steno.graphv, Mrs. Selim Mitchell WappIng Center. Tel. 8719.

ANDOVERMRS JOHN HUTCHINSON

VVIIUmnntIc 137-8

The annual town meeting which Is usually held on Monday following the elecUon win be held at the An-dover Town Hall Saturday evening at seven thirty.

There will be a meeting of the Andover Parent Teachers Assocla' tlon at the town'hall Monday eve-ning at eight o’clock.

It took Hollftnd 50 yean to re* cover completely from the "great tulip manta’ of the 17th century, during which speculators paid as high as $2500 for a single tulip bulb..

The house electric lights and tele- pboines have been restored, for the most part, on Highland and Gardner streets. The residents are very grmUful, realising what a task con-fronts ths repair men In ths out- jjrlng districts whers homes art so ccsttered. Ths full moon st preaent Is assltUng street traffic mean-while, In the absence of street Ugbts.

Sbtrley Porterfield of Oak Grove street celebrated her tenth birthday lost Friday. A party waa given to her by Mra. Carl Bengoton, who In-vited ten little guests about Shir- ley’a own oga to mska up ths party. The decorations wars In yellow and white. Including a big birthday coke. Shirley received many lovely pres-ents. Games and refreshments help-ed evcrjrone to have s good time.

Lost week the Hiking Mubyit tne HIgh'and Park (Porter street) school held a hot dog roast at the club house. Everyone reported s wonderful time. The group visited the site of ths old copper mine. In the woodlands behind the mill, for educations] purposes. Games ana "eats" furnished tbe fun for the oc-casion.

A dramatic club bos been organis-ed St the school house, and plans srs made for its opening perform-ance, a Thanksgiving play—tne date to be iumouncM very soon. The cost, under the direction of Miss Marcella Kelly, is working- hard. I

Mr. and Mra. A. L Crowell have | returned home after attending the j Worcester Music Featlvsl, tact week. They also Included a visit to > Boston, to hear the Boston Sym phony orchestra In concert.

Thread company at South Willing- ton*

About 176 attended tbe meeting of CUmox Chapter Wednesday nlgbL Hires candidates wera bal-loted u^n and degrqe work was exemplified.

Tbs selectmen and town clerk will bold a session Saturday at ths town hall from 9 to 13 a. m. and from 1 to 6 p. m. to examine the qualifi-cations o f, electors and to admit to ’ the electors’ oath those found qualified. The selectmen are Wil-bert C. Ruby, Tennant C. Bugbee ond Merritt L Usher; town clerk. George P. Bugbee.

Sunday I>r. Horace B. Sloat preached from the subject, "The Cliurch Trsnimlttlng Station or Lis-tening Post.” The story was "The Harvest Time of /*lfe.’’

Corporal WUllaro Tobennan Post. Veterans of Foreign Wars and La-dles' Auxiliary gave a party and dance Friday evening in Stafford Springs. The post was named for Corporal William Tobennan of South Wtllington, who died overscan during the World war. Thera are many members In this town and officers.

In the Good Will League bowling matches last week Lucler's Market of West wmington Wpn two of three games from De*mar Radlb. Wllimg- ton Five defeated RablnowiU’ Blue Sunoco 2 to 1.

Emergency telephones have been restored at West Wlllington, other-wise there Is no service yet.

STAFFORDSTRINGSJOHN C. NETTO

472. Stafford

WILLINGTONMISS JENNIE H CHURCH

Mra. Anna Stress Sykora, 73, widow of Alois Sykora, the sicter of Mrs. Frank Luchart, died last week at the Johnson Memorial hos-pital m Stafford Springs after a short lllne-ts. She came from New York, making her - home with bet .nistor In Wlllington. -v she leaves another sister, Mrs. Antonio Dvorak of College Point, N. Y. Burial was Ih L'nden Hill, N. Y.

Prayer meetings will be resumed Thur^jlay evenings. This week the service will be held In the Wlllington Hill church

Mrs, Hansine Denman, widow of Thomas Denman, has been visiting her daughter. Mr.i. Clark Burnham in Willlmantic. Saturday Mr. and Mra. Walter Malo took her to Ber- genflelds, N J., where she will make her home with another daughter and son-in-law. Rev. and Mrs. Wal-ter Weaterfleld.

Mrs. James Carpenter Is a patient Id the Johnson Memorial hospital.

Floyd Phelps, owner, with Miss Esther Hansen of tile Weet Wlll-ington store, made four trips to Worcester. Mass., for grain In a week, bringing back each time 133 ba.ga of grain, as there was no freight.

The station agent has Fetumed. They were laid off for a time.

A committee consisting ot Georg* V. Smith, James Service, Jr.', Mra. Ida M. Brown. Lawrence Amldon and Mla.s Rosa O. Hall has been ap-pointed to study tbe schedule of church services. .Neither church likes the afternoon service. As thejjastor has charge of both churches ORTeTb considerable discussion.

Gardiner H. HaU, son of the late Colonel William Henry Hall, who has been residing In Willlmantic, has returned to his native town and la' employed In the office of the HaU

Find Large Vitamin CValue In Sauerkraut

'ood technologists announce findings in their studies of the vita-min C content of sauerkraut which should dispel all doubt os to the value of this popular commodity as a oource of the anti-scorbutic vita-min. In tbe past, food specialists have quesUoned the effect of tb« fermentation process on the vita-' min C content ol kraut, but recent mveaUgaUona are beUeved to dem- pitetrate conclusively that when w u t la properly handled during the fermentation process It will retain about two-thirds of the vitamin C content of the original cabbage.

"Cabbage is one of the better sources of vitamin C among the vegetables and in the form of kraut bos loog bad a place m the diet to moke other foods, particularly m e ^ m m palatable and dlgesU- blo," say tbe ^wdoUste.

" p ^ t t e ooBfilcting reports to tbs

i^mentatitm In the large vats used to tbe factorial of kfaut-productogareas, practically no loss of vitomto C bos been found." they continue. "Some lose occura In the emell Kege uacd m home production of kraut, possibly because of tbe close prox-imity to sir end the fact tbot tbe carbon dioxide produced during fer-mentation may 'escape more readily from tbeee emaU contetoero.

"In kraut up to three months old, the everage loss of vitamin C u very low, but during prolonged stor-age It to slowly deetroyect, eepectoi- ly If tbe kraut to not well covered or if tbe brtoe to loeL to euen esses, the kraut to kept to for bet-ter condition by conning. Once m tbe con, very little, if any, yttomln C to' lost to their' eoqi^nMnte, freebly fermented kraut If properly conned, boa been shown to contain about two-tUrda as much vitamin C as tiM original eobboga and to thoro-

GRID g r^ ic iA L s GRADED

Detroit—Detroit high school foot-ball ofinoato ora gtadod aoch wedk by eodebog Tba batter ooeignmaats

CALLS FOR CARE . WSEED CHOICE

hyestigator Chnns FirnersShould Change Oat Shram

•*»

Oftener.

Tbs Republican caucus for the nomination of two representatives to tbe General Assembly and candi-dates for justices of the peace will be held Tuesday night In tba court room m the Warren Memorial Halt at 8 o'clock according to the an-nouncement made by Republican town chairman, Harold W. Bruce. Among those mentioned as possible candidates for representatives ore: Frank Engley, Jbek B. Hunziker, Town oounscl Joel H. Reed, 2nd and Joseph McCarthy, The Democratic caucus has not as yet been an-nounced.

The 1938-39 class officers of Staf-ford High school recently elected are as follows; Seniors, president Vasco Tlzlonl; vice president. George Lester; secretary, Evelyn Ulantc; treasurer, Alberta Eaton.

Juniors, president John Fonta- nclla; vice president, ^rank Las- bury; -«creljiry, Erma Greene; treasurer, Pauline Barblerl; class sdvisar, Mias Mary O'Halloran. Sophomores, president. Elmo Glan- antonl'; vice president, Angela Bas- co; secretary, Edward Panciera; treasurer, Edith Mattesen; class ad-visor, Floyd Brackley; freshmen, pres’dent, Mary Madsen; vice presi-dent, Betty Griffiths; secretary. James PIccin; treasurer, Walter WilUams; class advisor, Joseph Senechal.

Mies Maria S. Baldra£Ei daughter of Mra. Speranza Baldracbl of Staf-ford street was tendered a pantry sho.vcr at the home of Mr. and Mra. Alphqnse DeCicco, South Willing- ton, recently In honor. ot her ap-proaching marriage to Silvio De-Cicco son ot Mr. and Mra. John De-Cicco of South Wtllington.

Dudley Stawlck son of s County CommiB.’ ioner and Mrs. George Sis- wlck of Grant Avenue, student at Mdnson Academy has been appo.nt- ed manstger of the Academy Foot-ball team.

Angelo Zamichlel, 60, of Brown Avenue to a patient at tbe Johnson Memorial Hospital suffering with severs bums of the hands and feel received white at work In tbe boiler room of the Cyril Johnsan Woolen Mill late Saturday afternoon.

Tbe quick discovery ot a fire to the Delmonlco's Drug store on Main ctreet early Saturday rooming by Night Patrolmen, William Silk and Ernest Calchera averted serious damage. While patroimg along the buelneos aectlon about 1:30 o’clock the officers saw smoke pouring out of the two basement windows facing the street.' A call was sent In for ths fire department and Chief of Police, George Keoly responded with the new truck. The blaze started from on overheated furnace and was quickly extinguished.

Romlldo Golotto ol Brandon Heights waa appointed by the board of selectmen to compile the list ot old age assistance taxpayers of the town. Mr. Golotto succeeds Mlsa Loretta Murray who served during the past years. Mr. Golotto to olSo taking the enumeration of school children in town.

A meeting of tbe Stafford Re-publican club will be hMd tonight. Monday In the club rooms on Mom streeL Plana will be mode for the com l^ state eelcUon.

COLUMBIAWESTCon RICE

373-13. Willlmantic Division

FEARS F(Ht SAFETY OF LARDNER INCREASE

St. Jeon De Lux, France, OcL 10. — (A P ) — Feora for the safety of James P. Lordnsr, son of the tote Ring Lardner, American humortot. Increased tods* oi efforts to locats him conUnued fnfitleas, more than two weeks oftsr be disappeared while fighting m eastera Spain.

United States Ambassador Claude O. Bowen sold be waa exhausting oil resouress to tooni the fate ot Lord- ner, a votunUer of the International Jbrlgsde fighting for government Spanish foroea.

Lordnsr dtoappaored iSspt 32.

At the Repub'lcon .county conven-tion held in Rockville on Saturday. Harvey Collins ot this town was iiomlnated as candidate for sheriff of Tolland County. C3olllna won the nomination by, defeating Frederick O. Vinton, who baa held the office for 24 yeara For 12 yeara Mr Collins has been a deputy sheriff under Mr. Vmton.

Robert Foote of Hebron presented Mr. Collins' name to the convention after Henry Kirkpatrick had pre-sented Mr. Vinton's name. Tbe first vote, which wca by roU-call, result-ed In a tie, with each candidate re-ceiving 25 votes. On the second vote Collins received 27 and Vinton 24.

In the election m November Mr. Colima v/111 be opposed by Senator EMwln R. Dlmock of Merrow on the Democratic ticket.

De'egatea attending the conven-tion from Ck>lumbia were Mra New- toi. Smith, Mra. Letter Hutchins, Mra. Allan Robinson and Mra. Joseph Hutchins in place of Newton Smith and Lester Hutchins respec-tively. ^

The local chapter of the Red Cross, to which Andover. Hebron, and Columbia belong, held a meet-ing In Yeomans Hall on Friday eve-ning for the purpose of organizing • flood re'lef drive. The drive will start on Monday and continue through-out the week and will be headed, in (Columbia by Mra. Joseph Hutchins, aided by Mra. Mason Nuhfer and Mra. Aliop Robtnzon.* Rev. Harry E. Olcott of Bloom-field, Conn., on official of the Conn. Temperance end Anti • Saloon League, and olio tbe father of Mra Albert. Emerson, church school su-perintendent, was the guest epeokcr at the regular Sunday morning church seizes. Rev. Mr. Olcott spoke on “Habits" and explained the work of the Temperance League in this state.

Tbe regular meeting of Columbia Grange will be held on Wedneeday evening In Yeomans Hall storting at eight o’clock. Tbe program wlU be held m recognition of the excellent work done by the 4-H Clubs In town during the post yegr, end It to ex-pected that there will be gtiest apeokera present The meeting will be open to the public, and a short business meeting' of tba Orange wtll be held after the program In- Insteod of flrat oa to tba euatomary procedure.

The annual ocbool fair of the Old Hop River school will be held on Wednesday afternoon at the school. There will be on exhibit oi work done by tbe pupils during ths post year, and also a pet obow.

Frank Lockwood of West Hart-ford. who to planning to build an all- year-round house at Columbia Lake, hod difficulty m getting anyone to dig tbe cellar, so be hired a steam, shovel, which mode the trip to Col-umbia on purpose to ffig the cellar, and they woihed oU night under flood lights to complete the Job.

Joseph Szegdo. William Sorocchl, Sponcer Moeht, sad Theodora Swol want to New York on Sunday for tbs lost World Sartos goma botwota ths Taaksaa sad tba Cubs.

Mr. ahd Mrs.

S F O R T S R O U N D U R Bh u M I»D t£ B K tE T Z

Despite the fact that In many s« sans oats ors sown on hundreds of farms, fewer then 3 of evety 1,000 formers who plant oats core enough about tbe Quality of the seed they use to have the seed stocks tested for purity and germination, while much the same attitude also pre-vails toward barley seed stocks, de-clares Dr, W. F. Crosier of tbe New York Division of Seed Investiga-tions.

After numerous laboratory teste, a study of detailed raporte by farm-ers themselves, and analyses ol thrasher-run seed stocks collected directly from farmers’ 'gronoriss, hss been made.

"Tbe bulk of the seed oats and barley planted In the two seasons covered by this study woe taken from ths current season's crop and was grown on tbs farm where It was planted,'* says Dr. Crosier, who odds that, "It to also a practice to purchase seed oats and barley from a neighbor, but very few farmers buy oats' or barley seed from regu-lar seed dealers.”

Tbe same strain of oats or bar-ley to frequently planted by a farm-er for several cfinsecutlve yean, often originally obtained under mto- leadlng or meaningless variety namea. It to sajd. CorneUlan and Ithacan varieties are quite popVflar, .nays Dr. Crosier, who urges a more extended dhe of certified seed stocks. Many of the seed stocks examined hod been cleaned, but mostly on tbs form, very few stocks baving been token to a commercial cleaning mill. Seed oate and barley are treated for aeed-borna disease more often than not, a wise preoau- tlon since practically every sample examined contained smut spores. The Investigation also throws light on the relstlva merits of . western gror/n and locally grpwn pats. In-dicating the advantages of the lat-ter to farmers because of their greater adaptation to this State and their freedom- from noxious weed seeds In moat cases.

New York. OcL 9.—(A P I—Now that the seriez to over and a little newspaper space to available, the Dodgsra may announce the signing of Leo Duroeber os manager any hour... .one oi the etortes going around eeries beadquartera to that Baba Ruth eliminated himself by having a club-house fist fight with Uurocher just before the season ended.. ..without meaning to take any credit away from tbe Yankees, the consensus here to the Cuba beat themselves by playing bushleague baseball..... Joe McCarthynow bos won eight series games In a row from his old boss, Phil K. Wrigtey....Wrigtoy fired Joe and there is no love.lost between the pair, but-'McCarthy still sticks to one of Wrigley*s brands of chewing gum.

ftlmea for our money.... miaoto beating Indiana was what you would coll a real upset... .boys, wera the

! wolvea bowling -^der the htotoric Elms of the Tale campus, S s tu r^ night....also, in overy pub, pool room and cigar store in New Ha-ven.. . .oa we told you oil lost sum-mer, a good team to keep jrour eye

itflt...whereon to this Wtoconain oul ore^thd guys who wanted to bet Notre Dame would knock Georgia Tech, off by four touchdowns?. . . . Prof. Bill Alexander was saving up for that one.

; I Golfer Holton Smith and Jbrlde

In our book. Ripper Collins nulledthe best crack of all___ be sold:'We came, we saw and we. ore go-

ing borne lucky at not being hurt." . . . .Larry French, the Cub south- paw, soon will start a vaudeville tour giving badminton exhibitions, with Dizzy Dean as commentator___ that ought to be rich... .oil JoeMcCarthy bated about It was thatIt hod to be Gabby Hartnett___Gabby used to catch for Joe at Chi-cago, and the Yank bora loves and admires tbe big fellow, just like every one else....a delegation of American League club owners may coll on the. ol'lng Colonel Ruppert soon and oak that be break up tbe Yankees for the good of boaeba'I___ they may have aometblng there,at that.

Doc Sutherland out at Pitt prob-ably has tbe beet first football teamIn the country___ still be’s ho’ lerlngbis bead off because he' ain't got two... .them coaches!. . . . Dr. Lou Little, the Columbia maestro, eon doff that new derby of hie a few

Mr. and Mra. William Helm of East Hartford.

Mr. and Mra. Frank Sbek’eton ot West Hartford were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rice on Sunday.

ATHLETES ARE NOW FINELY EQUIPPED

DARTMOUTH TESTS BROWN THIS WEEK

I

Unbeaten Rivals Tangle At Hanover In Feature New England Contest

Boston. Oct. 10.—(A P )—It will be unbeaten Brown against unbeaten Dartmouth at Hanover next Satur-day In the Ivy league's key game ot the early season.

Both came through stiff tests last Saturday with ease. Brown rolling over Lafayette, 20-0, at Providence, and Dartmouth trouncing Prince-ton, 22-0, at Princeton.

Not even the colorful Army-Har-vard clash in Cambridge next week will detract from the contest at Hanover for both the Cadets and the Crimson met defeat over tne week-end—Harvard at the bands ot Cornell, 20-0, and Army by Colum-bia, 20-18. But the Cambridge bat-tle, relegated to the status of a ncere exhibition, will be well-attentt- ec, however, because of tbe parad-ing cadets and because Harvard again will be seeking its first vic-tory over Army on stadium turf.

Holy Crose, which beat Manhat-tan, 10-6, goes west to Pittsburgh for its next tilt with Carnegie Tech, while Boston College, Idle last week end, moves Into action on Wednes-day, Columbus Day, against Detroit University.

Lowell Textile, unbeaten In three games this fall-rthe latest being a 24-0 triumph over New Britain Teachers although only lb men were playing fo. Lowell tote In tbe game —will meet Ita toughest foe so far, Northeastern, next Saturday at Brookline.

Mlddlebury, victor over the Coast Guard, 7-0, wll move against Tufts, which took a 34-7 -tro'inctng from Amherst, while Providence to to en-gage Manhattan.

Boston University came through Its 19-14 victory over St. Lawrence in top shape, and started preparing for Upeola. whlR Rhode Island, a

.81-0 victor over American Interna-tional, moves against Massachusetts Stats, which took a 10-0 pasting from Connecticut.

Other gaihes next week’ .end! Worcester Tech at American Inter-national; Rocheatet at Amherst; WUllama at Bowdoln, New Homp- ■hlre at Colby; New Britsdn Teach-ers at Hyonnto Teachers; Connecti- .cut State at Mainer and Arnold at Batea

THIS WEEKTonight: Regular weekly Pro-

gressive bridge party. Rainbow Girls’ regular meeting.

Tuesday. Manchester Lodge, Past Moatera’ Night

Wednesday. Temple CSiapter, Or-der Eastern Star.

Thursday, Toll Cedan Bingo. Post Matrooa. Temple Catapter, Eoeteni Star meeting.

Saturday, Social Oub, Set Bock series.

BLOWN FROM BEDSProvidence. R. i„ Oct 10.—(A P I -

Six membera of the 'smlly of Sorkto Bsroton were blown from their bede early this iharning by the force of an oU burerr explosion In ths cellar which shook their house to the fbun- dotlooa. but they esesp^ with noth-ing mors serious than up.The blast btew ii wlndawa. fcnoeksd

fUndturs- and broks

Bin Brennan Rendnisces At Y SportrCamhral On Tlie Goed Old Days*

*Watchlng thess kids,” sold BIU Brennen, veteran umpire and ref-eree of the track meet at tbe Y<Trounds Saturday afternoon, "biinrrs back a lot of memories to me. I remember when we used to try to hold meets the same as this •)ne and for weeks we had to toy out the field, beg for equipment, overcome obstacles that^ these youngsters will never knovF

"Look at those three youngsters over there. A few mlnutM ago they watched Solomonsen, Shields and Cutler digging starting blocks and now they are doing the same thing,” said Bill. Omtinulng, Brennan re-marked, " I f these boys only realised that they have tbe beat o f' equip-ment, instructors and what not to further their atletlc equipment”

The other offlctols grouped around Brennan, Jock Bronnink, judge and timer; Frank 'Vittner, judge; Cpwlea, clerk of the course, and Jack Dwyer, oil got Into a heat-ed dtocu. slon over the track meet. Harry Thompaon, a newcomer at the Y, aeeraed a Mt dtoappointed be- ckuca of the small attondaace. Thompson remarked that In the morning there were about 600 kids and that only a handful were In at-tendance at the track.

"Think nothing of I t ” aald Bran- nan. VRlgbt up on tbe hill there to a radio that to bringring In a world series game. There art countli other radios tuned In oiy' football games. I f you keep thn eert of thing up, Mr. Thompaon,’* concluded Brennan, "you'll have your hands full every fall and spring.”

It waa an interesting' afternoon from any standpoint and It Inclden- tally marked the first appdarsnee of the cross-country team sponsored by Bob Mason. The ^am copped the two-mile event.

CRAVAT LEAGUE (Murphy’s Alleys)

Teant No. 4 took 4 points from Team No. 2, Team No. 1 and No. 3 broka even, each taking 2 points. Francis Dwyer was the big notoe of the evening, hitting high single with 132, and high three-string with 352. No fair taking an extra week to practice Francis.

The StaaffingsWon Loot..5..5..4..2

Team No. 3 ............Team No. 4 ..........Team No. 1Team l4o. 2 ............

Team No. 1 (0)Lewie ................. 88 1(WTedford .............. 98 98 88—288Schubert ............. 93 86 119—296Brennan ..............107 89 96—293

381 876 898 UBS Team No. 4 (4)

Fo k........................117 94 91—802Nielsen................ 94 91 87—272Dwyer ............. .-.U6 103 188—SffJBengaton ............ I l l 87 86—393

Torrance Johnson .. Warner .. Low Man

487 877 406 1819 Team Ns. 9 (8)

85 89 78—883 .. 84 136 88—818 ..104 108 lSOr-840 .. 78 86 97—888

886 410 401 1188 TSssi Ns. 1 (8)

R itch ie................ 77 105 98—870Lsrder ............... 73 93 99—867Dietz^ Jr. ............ 108 89 97—889Dietz, Sr. ........ ..107 98 131—830

THEBAUD COPS 1ST OF SAILING RACES

Belts Bhieiose In Opening Test Of Inlemitioiial Fidh ermen’s Run..

(Berbers Bourne, tbe sewing ms- chine belrezs) saw tbe series finale ....when Mayor LsGusrdis gets that pig ha woo from Mayor Kelly of Chicago, he'll treat those Tanka left In town to a barbeeua... .the Sons of Italy football team of BridgeporL Conn., not only to coached by an Irishman, but all the players are either Greeks, French or Hebrews..,.In other words, there isn’t an Italian In a carload... .Au-burn to stressing football to tbe ex-tent that tbe coaching ateff to routed out of bed for daily meetings at 8 a.' m.

Gene Tunney says no living fighter can defeat Joe Louis, but that Louts will in time :ick himself by eating too much fried 'chicken and pork chops....well, can vou Imagine a nicer way to get licked?... .Joe Gordon’s younger brother. Jack, to nuUclng a name for himself aa a shortstop out at U. oi Oregon and since Howard Hopaon, Oregon's baseball coach, looks out for tbe Yanks In that territory, you can look for young Jack to be stepping Into Frankie CrosetU's shoes one of these fine days—but not for a longtime, we all hope___ this waa a flatseries and everyone to glad It to over, including the (^hs.

Aboard achooner Gertruda L. Thebaud, Oct. W —(AP ) -r- Couraea wera shaped from Boston for CRou- ceater today by Captain Ben Pine's Challenger for the International Tah- armen’B trophy, Gertruda L. The* baud, and the Canadian defender. Captain Angus Walters’ big salt banker Bluenose, which Thebaud de-feated yeeteittoy.

Thehaud’a victory In the opening race of a three-outrof five series meant she needed but two more to claim thq big silver cup emblematic of sailing supremacy of tba North. Atlantic fishing fiSets.

The second race will be sailed Tuesday off O’oucester, Thebaud’s home port, and the third, 'Thursday In the same waters. I f a fourth should be necessary, It will be sailed off Boston and, assuming a fifth might be required to aett’e the Issue, the location would be determined by 'a flip of a coin.

Thebaud won by nearly ' utea In the opening race, udilcbl, sailed twice aroimd an IS-mile" angle. Captain Walters hod ed the course a "merry-go-’round,"but it did not prevent his contesting It fiercely and he twice took thelead from tbe challenger. Both vea- aelB carried deck loada of water os they were hove down by a brisk north westerly, but neither skipper spared hto vessel until a fractured frre topmast forced (Japtoln Waltersto douse his jib topsoil and foretep- aoil. That was near the end of thecontest' when nothing could pravent Thebaud's victory. ^

Ctoptaln Walters hoped today to mend the damage and have Blue- nose fit and on tbe line for the stort-ing gun Tuesday morning.

“She doesn't seem to go os well oa she did In the posL” he said. " I f I bad time, I think I could find out why.’’

P o w l i P f ^OOURAN’S LEAGUE

Conran’s Bowling league got off to a fine start Jack's Tavern took 4 points from tha fast Depot Square garage five, while Tafts Restaurant took 8 points from the Star Mar-ket Fire eaters took 8 points from Gerieb's Filling Station. High honors went to Kecley of Taft’s team with a three string of 376. A KroUer took htgl. atngle of 144. ‘n>e league will reaunM ^ay tonight Tha Hot Brau league of RockvUle win get under way Oct 18 with 8 teanM.

Blaacheeter Fire Dept (8)J. Spillane........ 96 98 96B. Frasier A. Roberta ..C. Varrlch .. C. O’Bright

86 88 110 111 116 |04 108 111 118

.110 131 90

880 883 418 U46

BOWING FOB A U ,Seattle -After a Mpae oi ssvan

intcr-daaa rowing will ba ra-

Totals ............511 644 618 1678Oerrich’aFnilag .StaUon (1)

J. Brogan .... B. Culver . . . . H. Newcomb , W. Gerrich .., A. Blozle . . . .

87 84 30898 86 38889 101 286 85 96 80187 131 807

Totals ........ 600 447 487

Star Market (1) W. Wayner ...r09 03T. DeclantU A. Rubacha . C. Declantla H. Wayner .. P. PulinsU ..

103 94. 90 —130 135 102 105 128 116

118 809 07 394

Taft’S Bestanrant (9)D. Sadronslnskl 93 103 84 378R T a f t ............ 96 101 86 373A. Kroner . . . . 106 02 144 845M. KeUey . . . . 137 131 137 876 V. Farrand . . . . 100 103 131 324

Totals 624 610 — —

C. Hart ... H. Berger H. Berger Dewey ... E. Hart ..

Wappiag

WladaorvllleS. Hyduskl ..............I l l.1. Hydusld.................87A. Barker............. 101G. Atkina ............. 112E. Muslak .............. 117A. Atkins ..........

108 111

91 97

97- 88

MltcbcDKovla........... IG erit's ..........Davla : ........ :Kert .............

Jack’s Tavern116 111101 98 111111 119 118 U9118 122 134

Depot Square OarageMUce......................106 101 116Joe,.................. 105 US 91Bob- , 1 1 0 118 114K en ...................... ; 87 119 104F r IU ...................... 125 90 106

ORIOLES TO PBACnCB

TAKING A BEST

New Tork—Lew Ambera says ha wU^teDO^^hU^ ttds but wria

The Orltrics win practice this eve-ning at tbe Y grounds and on Wad- nesday and Friday evening oi thU week. The team had a full squad yesterday morning and looks for-ward to opening tbe aeaaon next Sunday. Irish, Joe Zwlckla, FIsilon and George Auatraukua reported for tbe 8rat time yesterday and aaveral other new candidates are expected to be on hand this week.

Big Tim Tuminakl at center has rapidly improved during the past , week and his brother at half bask looka Ilka the best blocking back un-covered at thevBorth eoJ la aome

rrs. OMt Slags handled tba team fine atyla at tba qtiarter back post and during tbe Week Dwyer ex-

pects to have a fornddabla squad rsa4y for the opening this week.

■8AMUHJS9TBK BVH NIM O W HB I4 I, M AM dHfaSTBR, CONM „ M O N D A Y , OCTOBER 1 0 ,198S

YANKEES ANNEX THIRD STRAIGHT W O R L D ~ S E ^SiJc Eastern Grid Powers Are UnbeatenAU , READY FOR ACTION

m BATTLES THIS WEEKCondi STracote, Dart-

nMath, Brown, Cohmibia And Holy Cross Risk Clean Sates; Here’s Fro- fram Thronghont CointryBy HBRBBBT W. BABKER

New Tork. Oct 10__Free flnoUy* “ *-nt competition from base-

„ 1838 footbdll season takesl -ehargs of the sports scene thia

apparently has amah hope against Arkansas which dropped a haart- breaking 9-8 verdict to Baylor when Bob Nelson, sophomore osnter, booted a field goal from the 19-yard Um In the last SO sseonda of play. Baylor’s noo-eenferanea (oe is Can-

ON P A C m e COAST Far Wsat; A fun Pacific Coast

conference slate finds U. C L. A „ paced to a 18-0 upset triumph over Washington by K m y WasUngten, arrayed against California’s defend- tng eham^ons In the outstanding engagement Oregon, the current

High Sports Last Season Had Deficit of $1,273.23

4^

^ m s i ..

|e d s h ie l d s f e a t u r e sYMCA TRACK CARNIVAL

son waa the moat succesaful Man-^estw High has enjoyed in ita hte-

idpouit at compettoiy from tha standpot _lUve supremacy, the achooTa s p ^ program was a financial flop to the tuna of 81,27323, according to P r ln c l^ Edson M. B a lley^ u te - ment u the annual town report

toketball, In which tha Red and— It gioric

lecord, came out ahead by 8378.7L that margin being provided by in-creased attendance at home games during a aeason In which Manches-ter captured the OCffL stete and New England diadems and won 18

leader with two victories and no <«t of 88 games. Ths profit mightam 8A. —*-* rnmm.__m_b I _____ • . • . . • _

Three weeks ot preUmlnory firing, marked en the whole by surprising kdherenea to ths form eborte, slm’- ply have whetted the appetites of football fans for major teats to oooao. Thus far tt’a bean largaly bat-

dafaate, draws as its rival Stanford which was a dlsappolntmant la bara- ty winning fl-o, over Waoblngtoa BUte. Southern Caufocnla ratunu to its own base to play WaShlnston Stete, already beaten la threa con- ferenca teste. Washington and Ore-gon State ooUlda la tbe fourth oeU' fereace game.

hava been higher except that travel-ing expenses In some Insteacao ex-ceeded allowances In tournament competition.

Only three other sports derived aiw revenue at aU from gate re-ceipts and the amoimt coUcoted was far below exproaee. Football coat 1944.88 and received only 1841.06;

88 and drew only 18028; owUnadag cost 1149.70 and mad# but 8820.

Socear, track and field, c n _ , country, tennis and golf didn't pay a cent and contributed hoavUy to tbe deficit lUite abooUng wrahSrjKbte.’ ya«^. »0 r « f . brinsi

77m finonrial atetemant tor sports foUows:

Football .. Basketball Baseball .. Swimming

'•aeaaeeaeaq*■ • e e e e a t

.8 841.08

. 8,088.80 10.88 820

Witt Three E?eiti; Gorgetti Horeeskoe Ckamp; DeDt- Feri Cepe Net Diadem; Green School On Top; March Takes 2”Milo Race

Gag praetlea but from now on nee- Gonali'I ehamplonahlp hopea will ba on

Una week after week.TBE BASTBBN PBOORAM

Thia week’s program lines upfoUowa:

Two undefeated New Tork state rivals, Cornell and Syraeuoe aolHda at Byraeusa in the main do- westlc battle, Cornell. In triumphs over Colgate and Harvard, the lat-ter 20-0, has shown great all-around strsngte. Syracuse routed Mary, land, 68-0, last week but has not yet really been teoted.

Four more unbeaten arrays meet •s Holy Cross, 19-6 victor over Man-hattan tackles Carnegie Tech, and Dartmouth, 33-0 oonqtMror of Princeton on three long runs, en-gages Brown's vastly Improved forces. Columbia, paced by Sid Luckman and Art RadvUos to a sen- aatlooal 80-18 victory over Army, tangles with Colgate whose sturdy defease held Duke to a 7-0 count.

Penn, whose potent attack built around Fraads Reagan and Jim Connell, erusbed Tale 21-0. flrat

t o t e Claim, uaboaten far wastem baoehall. In which Maacbcoter m^pendent, eases off agalBst tbs league crown sad was run-Ansoaft.

Rocky Mountain: WhOe tha Uiii- verslty _of Colorado la playing

Dtsbursameate.Footbdll.........................Basketball......................BoocerTrack and arooa country . Baaaball ......................Swimming............. ........Tennis ...........................Golf ..............................

83,729.21

148.70.872780.00

84.M3.44

TTie north and stepped Into the limelight Saturday with an all day sport’s program that was not only axcallent la perfonaaaoa but aplrit- ed aa well. Ed Sblelde, Mancheeter

I High track eiar, eopped tha in-dividual honon In the aenlor evoate, ebaring the epoUlgbt with Everett Salmonaen and BIU Mureh.

Balmonsen waa late for tha 100- yard daeh but arrived Gbm to

Shew, Green, third. DleUnce, 14 f t11 In.

Sudden and Sad End For Cubs As Champions Gain Four Straight Triunq>hs

ywla-Oreen, am . HdUeter, eeoondi Nathan Hale, third; and Robertson fourth. No Urn# teken.

step the 80 la the flaa Gma of 88 and 8-10

OeotgeGonai

re Washington In aa latefaae' batGa, Brigham Touag, cur-

r « t leader of the Big Seven, meete Uteh. whUe Utah State, which ran up 30-0 count on Ciolerado, atseke up asalnat Denvsr.

RAMS SCORE UPSET OVER BEARS, 14-7

s Open Season In Scoreless Deadlodc

aeoonda. Mureh r a n __teammates. Vlttaar and Joe Packard Into the grodad wlniilng the two mUe town ehamplonahlp eaally, lead-

I tng Psekard to the, taps by 800 ywda.

Shlaldo, hawavar, copped first la the hundred and 440 and then cop-

Gain Second Wm Againit Western Pro Leaders; Giutt Topple Redskins.

SoiA Enders Hold Segir Trinsportatioi Eleren Of WiDimutic Even; FmnUe Ends Local Threat To Tal- Ij On 4”Yard Line.

L Oct

straight b ea U a g ^ 'azUngNavy which ral on irii

.take Its third game with

illed up a 88-0 acoraliBlnla.

Tbe InteraeeUonal program Is headed by the annual duel between untested Fordham and Purdue’s BoUermakere who surprized by hold-ing MInnesoto to a 7-0 declalon. New Tork Univeratty, meanwhile, enter- tains North CaroUna; Boetea College plays Detroit; West Virginia, ohoeked by a 8-8 draw with Wash. Ington and Lee, faeea Michigan State, sad VlUaaova pleye host to Centre coUege.IN THE MIDDLE WEST

Middle West: An InteraeeUonal battle between Pitt and Wliconsln and a perhaps crucial Big Ten match between MlnneeoU and Mich-

10.— (AP)-^-Cleve- first

wuuung sireoK m two years of no- Gonol profeeetoaql footnoU play to-day and everyone was happy about It except those perennial Gtle favor-ites, the Chloago Bears, They were the vletlma of the Rama' oecoad ttralght victory.

The Rama, who won only one game In their Inaugural season last year, surpriewi the Bears yssterday, 14 to 7. Coming a week after th ^ 31-17 Detroit conqueot, the win gave the Rams two la a row after three defeats and accounted for the Beers first setback In four starts.

The Eastern dlvlaion also had its lost undefeated record blotted out when ths New Tork Giants rallied through the air in the final period to overcome Washington. 10 to 7. The defeat also cost tbe Redskina undte- lUted possessioo of first pleas, aa irooklyn rode over Pittsburgh 17 to

Morlarty Brothers, tbe south end’s semi-pro grid representsGvaa,

Local Sport Chatter

pad the broad Jump. Baoidea this be took seeood la the high Jump and tlM 88a Cutter won tta high Jump

That notes you thought weal thund«r Mrly Banirdiy •vMilaf w m only tha sound produced whenomy u s sound produced when yours Oavello second ^ l y toppM from the haighte of I Qutda OlorgotG

2 u «. to the h iof this dlaay whirl. . . our attempte Hav Delia po m

at 8 feet 4 laehaa but fh lM 'a t 8 feet 8 UMheo.

PeGta Marion Vittner won her Bent In the M jrard dash for woman and then want on to win the final In ths good Gma of 182 aeoonda, brtaklag tha tops two yards la front of Mtei Raider.

SalnMnaaa stepped around the roiruteGea baaae In 14.4 aeoonda,

and Shtelde third, ■wompad all oppo-

teunched thslr 1988 ML Nebo yesterdayholding tha strong Sega tetloa eleven of WtlUn

am"*”.!:former routing DuqunS.^f’S l’ w d ISL triumphe.-one defeat « d a

Sunday, with Oeveland trying forCrlsler, soems to have come a long | its third straight at ~ ‘ 'way, as a 45-7 decision over Chicago tesGSea but the Wolverines prob-ably will be underdogs agalnet pow' erhouse Mlnneaota.

Ohio Stete, beaten 14-7 by South-ern Callfornla’a pasaea dtes in asalnat formidable Northweateni which routed Drake, SS-0. CMeago 8Bd Iowa get together In anotherBig Ten eonferenee game.

nUaeta which surprisesurprised19-8, will attempt to halt Elmer Laydan’a Notre Dame outfit which had to o> overcome stout resistance be-fore topping Cteorgla Tech 14-6. In-

Nebraska’s Corn-buaken who eriebeated head coach Biff Janas’ UrGutay by dropping an an but unbattavaUa 8^ deriMon to lOwa State’a eyelonaa

Big Six Interast wU canter on the meeting of Oklahon^ which baited Texas 18-0. add Kansas, and the

it Columbia between Iowa and Utesouri, beaten 81-18 by

State. The latter plays night against Marquette

7-0 conquest of Southern Methodist was one of last week’s prime uMete.Do w n s o u t h i n d i x i e

South: Here the pivotal clash is between undateatad Alabama and Tennessee. Alabama waa unlmpres- ^ In a 14-0 wtback of North Carolina state while Tenneaeee was winning a eoutbeastern oonfersnee fracas from powerful Auburn 7-0. Mississippi, which engineered a ma- lor surprise la beating Louisiana SUte two weeks ago, wlU try for nnother against VanderbUt, hard pressed to stop Kentucky, 14-7. Au-

ta tha only other aouthaastcni oea ^ence game. Tntene’a Green Waro which halted NorOi Carolina 17-ia BOW moats Rloa hasten 8-6 by Louisiana state oa Guy MUnar’s 5?*** ***• M-ynrd Una Ui

ntoutea of play. Ctowgla

n, -* - Pittsburgh,Washington wiU take on Detroit, which slapped down Green Bay 17 to 7 yesterday. The Packers will meet Brooklyn, the Bears and Cardl- nole clash again at Chicago, and PhUadalphla playa at New York.

Carl Utttefleld |hve Clbveland Its winning toueh'down egslnet the B m yesterday when he picked up % fiPBbteM punt tn the third qunrt#r and raa 88 yarda Jutea Alpbonse ■oorwl IB the oMBbig parted foglvo the Rams a 7^ tend. Tbe Bean marriwd 88 yards for tbelr only score iB the Giird period and la the Saal quarter advasoed 78 yards be-fore betag stopped <m the 19 yard line.

A t GnsB Bay, Detroit roUod up 10 potato bofors tlw Parimrs could get started. After Oodl UbeU bad passed to Carl Mu|laaeaux for the Packers’ score, Lloyd Cardwell darted 28 yards to eUneb victacy.

Ace Parker’s 77 yard run i i i i 54 yard pass to Jeff Barrett featund thp Brooklyn triumph, whieh eanw despite a neat deaxmotratloe Iqr Pituburgb's Whiaaar White, whose pass accounted for the Pirates <mly ■core. Ed Doaowekl’e ehort paeriw tbruete earned New York 78 ya iS

campaign at afternooB by ar Trmamr- maaUo to a

scoreleSa deadlock. Tha Qaa Houa- ore ehowed flashes of Impreoslvsneas In their opener and with a Mt more pracUce should develop Into a high scoring array,

Moriartys turned in the only seriotw scoring threat of the ea- counter by marching doweMhb field to the visitor’s four-yard marker on a aeries of driving U8e plungi_ Juet when it seemed that the locals would tally, a fumble was recovered by WlUlmantlc end the opportunity ended. ^

ITiet was the closest either team got to pay dirt during the afternoon although both mode eustolhed mar- ohaa Into enemy territory only to have their offensives bog down. It was a Cleon, hard fought game all tbe way with Manchester .showing much promise from the coaching of Luddy Hanaen. Kreba kapt Mori- artya out of danger frequently with hla steUar punttag. Tha anUre local tsMo played a good brand af foot- baU while Croatwoltha sad Wo(>d- worth featurwl for the tavadera

. ______ attemptsat master-mlBdlBg baekfirod all ovw the oaGoa’a gridiroas as our oboioas feU hither sad thither aad yoo

e pitchlag aad the T te

A Mt the worse from aheUwliock and other affUctloaa of siwiii«> aa- turs, wa rise from our bed of pabi ^ sorrow to report the aad aewe that we saMrged with oaiy aevea- teen aeourate guassea In 24 tries for a percentage of .740 . . . our hast cholcea were UCLA over Washlag- ton and L8U over Rios, our worst waa Tale over Penn (II-O for the latter it turned out) . . .

Ray Dalle Fbra won tha T teanls champloBahtp basting Frank Vttt- aar In the Saala 7-5 and 8-8.

Tha wtarwrs In the senior eventa:100 yard daeh'- Shlelda. E. White

aad Cutler. TIbm. 102 aeoondaHigh Jump—OiUer, Shtelde, WhR-

ney. Helsht, 8 feet 4 inches.440 yard dash—BhleldA Plerca and

White. Ttma, 1 mliK 4 aaeotida.880 y ^ daoh — Salmonaen,

Shields, White, time, 88 and 8-lU eeecnda

Broad Jump—Shields, Whitney, CuUer. Distance, 19 f t 1 inch.

Two mile, town ehampioiMiilp— Bill Mureh, Joe Packard, (Vittner

Olri’a Eventa—UaSar 18 38 yard daeh—Joy MeSweeaey.

Bt# JamM, first, tints 5 fi*io second; Joyce Bronke, South school, serond; Margaret Fredericks, Green, third.

Strickland, ^bertaon, oeqpnd;a t Jamea

third. Dletanea l i featOIri’e Eventa—Over U

40 yard daoh-Mabel Pheiro: Green, first; Anna Uyaoka, HoUla-

Joan Howa,^1b2i H 8*10 ttconds.

Juwp-Sumlalaska. HolMa-

Rw m. S t James, third. DIataaoa. 18 Kv# 2 In.

180 Green, yard relay— Manchaatar - *tet.- HolUater, saoond; sad ® ^ *® *** 17aM net taken.

TOsre was no ouramary of the

TOompson handled the meet with the amtlsUaee of several young boys

'^*^**'’ The final u ii^ wtlon of the sebools ta the grades:

HoIlUter ........................ 88 1-8**• ............. .....

*lh Orode TTfiitli N a l ^ H a le .........................

......................... 7......................... 8

Badmiataa TienSam Msesey brought to y^nAbes-

fcTslT*. B>en to flya thawrainton fans an Insight Into thia Mrenuoua sport Ray Deluceia, or “ • Tale Art aehool, runner-up far

New Yorkers Estabfish New Record For Raieball Cfauac; Hare Woi 24 Of Last 27 Series Games; Power b Naii Factor h Outcome.

B y G A Y L E T A LB O T N sw York, Oot. 10.— (A P )

— The 1988 World Series o f bsaebsn passed- sway quietly last sven inr s t the Yankee ata- diom before 60,000 bored rela- tioBS, w ith Rufua Ruffing pitching and Bill Dickey catch-ing. Pleaae do not send flowers. The fa c t that the New Yoric Yankeea, in beating the Chica-go Cuba four atraight, eatab- Uahddia record o f three consec-utive W orld Series triumphe over the struggling National League does not somehowaeera SKcIting. Ths only happy

1b th e

tne New Haven ehamplonehipBernard, aaoe D New Haven

Harry Orayeon of NEA turned In a briUiant achievement with nlne- ^ out of 84 for .783, while Herb Barker ot the Aawiclatod Preaa had eighteen out of 24 for .760 . . . as a raoult ot our second week of ac- Gvlty as a football prognosticator, ^ i^ te r Is new tIM with Barkerfor Srst plaee, each of ua baving 17out of 60 for ,740 . . . Grayson tethird with 30 of 50 for .780 . . . our paroantegaa wera Sgund wrong teat week but ere now right we hope . . .

waa foread out). Tima, 10 min, 4 seoonda.

80 yard dash, wooMa—Marlon vittner. Raider and Sumteteoka. Time, 18 and 8-10 aaconda

Broad Jump, woman— Marion Vittner, 14 f t 7 1-8 Inches! second, B. Raider; third, Sumteteaka.

High Jump, woman—B. Raider, . f t 4 techee; aeeond, D. Raider; third, a Ge, Mtes Opalach Phelpe.

Bs m circling, awn—Salmonaen, first, Ume, 14.4 seconds; ascend, Oavenu; Shlelda third.

tournament wlimer, save a ontoadid axhlMtUm in the aingtea match.

Whan thaoa t w o ^ g mto the big court in the gymniatum

^ fitafirSO o'clock ihmrp o brief Introduction wM givm by

work# Am tho konio proeroisod Um fine points of the g im iw on « - plained In ^ taU by Maaroy aad a ^ e crowd appteudad the efforts or the playere ImpartlaUy.

At tba finish the douMee teams t^ k the court and ware composed of Massey and Tenny against Rey-nolds and Burnham. This was also a clever exhlMtlon.

Prior to the badminton a turob- Hng e lM composed of pupUs of Harry Thompson gave tba large crowd a real thrill. A volley ball game, i-*— -

fsstu rs o f ths seriss lay fact that BOBS o f ths Cubs was aorioufly hurt by an inflsld groundsr.

Never A Baal CUntealIt never waa a contest from the

Gma the Cuba* Infleld Maw up la the opening gaaw at Chloago until tho Yankeea ooorod four runs off four

make tha anal(count ’em) Mtehon la tho eighth

:or«ay to

ba faclaga34 of Ite teat 87 World

Inning yeoti result S to 8.

The Cuba I , team that now

aanaa gamea wan a Mghtwalghttrying to atand up ta a boavy- walght They could only take a few quick lOcka at the gteatF ehtes

Facts, FiguresOn World SeriesBy THE ASSOCIATED PBBSB

FINAL STANIBNOW Xem

New Tork (A. L ) ' ............4* 0Chicago (N. L . ) ............... 6 4

Roeulta:Flrat Go o m (A t Chicago)

W - ^ R. R HChicago ......................... 1 t 1

Ruffing and Dickey; Loo, RuaoeOand Hartnett Attendaaoo 48248.

Sacosd Oanw (A t CUeag^

New T o rk ....................... 7 8Cailcogo .......................8 U 8

Oomea Murohy end Dtekey; Dean, Fioaoh aad luruM tt< u « A t t - a —

Tklri Go o m (A t New Tork)R R R

Chleago ............. 8 g iNew Y o rk .......................s 7 8

Bryant, Rueaell, PYoach aad Hart-nett; Pearson end Dickey. Attend-ance 66238. -

Fourtk GaBM (A t New TseB) #AO-._ R R E.t ”iicoge ^ • g g ' 1New T o rk ............ 8 U 1

Lae, Root, Paga Fraaeli, Cartaten, Dean and ODas; Ruffing aad Diekay. Atteadanoa e#247.^ [^■arieo* total attendahoa aad ra-

tal

•r

eelpta: tandanca saasfssoss

a a • f <'Pool

• • 00* 6 • s a « MAttRaealpte Playara' 1 Commiaeloaar'a Shan... 18TiSt82S Cluba’ and Leaguaa*

Shares S8S29A44

I 0 e a o # a a

reenter eeaaon. was officially at bok 13 tlmaa ia tha tour famea of tha Just concluded (aU rlaeaic with tha Tankaea and ha fhlted, eenmletaty and saUraly. te make a siagtiJiro M t

That to a batUag *7Maoe* ta r hava aqualted in the htatoiy o f wqvid

hefon Uiey sot wtdleped. la fact, the toM Urns aThey gotatretehea of magalSeeat

sm

it (or a Uno of In the compoaito bca'seora

for a oeriea was ia ItU , vriMa Joha j Murray of tha.NoW Tork Giaats But tbelr pitchers Invariably were *«**’ did It ha-knocked for a loop beforo the end

pitehl^ from BUl Lea Dlaiy D o a n lfi^ aad Clay Bryant, aad they hanged | out a lot of goed kite, first and teataad Clay Bryant, aad they

of Ura gamamost blows mounds me

biThite f « I h ;LfiiHiT 1« Gw plate waa fSr mors UBiquaiK i nniT^nnSfith# champlooaWp sat thanthat only annoyed the Tankee | aome3*a ate-game undefeated

, winning atreak for hla serioa aareer, Pteyar Pane lor WU Dtekay's four ainglea in tba

ehuffle board end hendbaiil Than aro many today. Including 1 g n m a or Stan Hash’s oavsn rounded out the d ^ a aotlvlUea at eight NiUonal League manageru emglea to equal a mark t a a fieur- Uw T and a fforde^nw 1000 aporte *te#rlBg wlGi alarm •ertea, or W New IWrt Tan-jNlewere a reel rotertammrot • t^ te -h o ld tta Tankw k a ^ ^Thera wera also demonetratlona e( *•**•?. MmsMiU. They wero|“ **** w w d onampioa^pa w p row-hand weavlni, ehalr eaning other hand ereft exhlblte.

equally gloomy about tho future of | the game a year age, whan

It the 01

l lkrea 'For instanea, RaynoMa hit enaotte

of the inflold la hte

Ths Ub s u m:Mpriarty Brothers— la Bobuete.1

to Ite wton ly tm^down.

ClubChicago BearsDetroit ........Qroea Bey . . . . Cteveland ,, . Chicago Cerdinate

STANmNGSWon Loat Tied

88831

11884

Tech t a y i Dnke:ithCW IA Duke and North CaroUna ea-

BciHKWfereiicc rivate. tha soutbara eoaforenee race Is tarn- porarily Oecalmad, Richmond, one eonferenee triumph to ita arodit may coma a cropper against Vlr- ^ M U ita r y w ^ b S d ^ L ^ caemscs ta a 7-7 draw. W aka^t^ czt. which akad out a 80-19 declaion over Souto CaroUna. meete North

Furman and ata- »i'l. Davidson and South Carolina, are tba othar eottferesea patriaga

.‘ outhweat; Teau OwlatteaJ^-

Essteni DivlaieaWBahington .............. 8Brooklyn ...................2Now T o rk ..................3PhUadelphla .............. 2Pittsburgh ................3

Inst Weekte BaanHa Dstrott 17. Green Bay 7.New Totfc 10, Waahlngtca T. Brooklya 17, Pittaburgh 7. aevataad 14, Chloago Basra 7. Pittaburgh 18, New Tork lO.

TMa WaakteSunday—Waablngton at DotroR,

Philadelphia at Naw Tork. < a r~ ~ iMid at Pitteburgb, Chleago Bi at Chleago Car^tais, BrooMyn Green Bay at Mttwaukaa

Chambero; It. Skoog; ig, Wolfram;c. Feituaon; — ------ ' * -

againStetq

^ Feituaon; rs, McIntosh, lulteno;

9«nlR Vlttaar; Uib, RoM as^ M ^Staum; fb,Jowakl; ihb, ByehoIsU,

Krotaa Healv.Sogaro-te, Moron; It, fCowleaU;

Ig. Ivaa; e. GIffera; rg, Sprout, rt,| Ocoalor; ra, Roberta; qb, Wood- w t h : Ihb, O’Brtaa; rhb, Goes; w, Kroaal, CroatwraiUw.

Raferae, Falkoskl; nmptro, Dowd; hand Uasaaua, Henry,

Henry Oryk ot this town has In gained a berth on the Conn.

varetty soccer team this year a tetterman teat year aa goaUa,

^■^^J****™ • halfback port . . . Prank Healy, oteo a local hoy, te man^te of Maos. Stote’a vanity foothaU team this year . . .

Hone shoo pitching—Oim-getU de-feated OavoUa, 60-16: M ^ o n

G IO R lH n TWIRLS sonBALLVi(niORy|“^

I laea

. _______ de-(aatod KldaUe, 60-11 in tha aeml-

tha60-6.'

tournamant —

finals; GiorgotG Maiidea, 6agatnot:

Tstuite ilensataped Vittner la threa aata In tha

PLAYER POOL SETS SERIES MARK

HOnUN BUTS Nimx New York, Oct 16.— (A P )—White

IN COAST Nngames, the Chicago Cuba had eomo ■ ooneeiaUcB today tot kaowliin *«—

Aostralisn E ltm im tas Warlfl »nocrg4,6742rap3oe t a Champ In ‘ e e Seta In Pfi- r*ilS!?#*eifle Toam am aat. I The ^ gamaa o f the world oer-

T o n r n a ^ t . I P * * ’’ W L *Berkeley, Calif, Oct 10. - ( A P ) - I m

^ MW Gagtee champion ptoyen’ poM ’to ro e ^ up aoM ^who says be wtU turn pro vrbca I the wrorid aeriea rivate

(llrisloii ehibo of tha twotha twot ^ "thid looks good to me,’’ won't I leagues.

riS,iwp Ste^i * “**“ ■ • •«««p n w p uus . decided la tour games although laUeUezs and anatte tennis, la e ix .g i^ eerlea drawing latgarPlaying ___ _ _ ___ ____

^,AiMtiaUa’a Harry I cniwda to the lin t f ^ g r a e o '^ m 3 *Gerday. which the pleyers* "cut" comro the

A?" Vsakom aadaiente cut up a $ 4 ^

va

GBBBN OAOBBS PBAOTIOE AU playsro Interosted ki trylag

out t a a poolUon on the M -irkta ter Green boakatbaU team are ateied to report at the Boat BMe Rao Tuaa- day Bigkt 8t a o'eiMk. It te kapod

aaca dumped Budge in the Paelfle southweat tournament at L m An-geles:

•**?••* taterday Budge •old I t X get the right contract I any turn pro, who knows?”

Today Bopman aMete Gena fimltk ^Beikotey lnjthf aami-flaala. Rob-

_ _ _ __ ijn m 5455*008.66 mehm In 1886.' ’

The ehareo of tbe two elubo ateo wrare raconte t a faurgam a affairo*

•and finata boforo bowtns out fi-4> 8-d, f-8; DaUa Para w o n ^ dafami- wkea Wltroa faUad to ahow up. in the afternoon finals Delta Fare ear- lied too many guns, wlimlag from VRtnor, g-4 and 6-1.

In tho womoa'a tenate stngtea CaroUna findth defeated Mlsa Vitt oar, 8-4; 8-1. AlMna Kaaka defeat ad Mtei Helen Hohl, 8-4, 6-8. In the fiaate, Mtes Kaaka dafoated M Smith, 4-6, 7-8, and 8-2. ' '

Oraon Sehael Itepa IsfilntUtig at 8 o'clock aharo *»

lomcatarv ■ 'fundffii d some epoctaeuiar formancaa for a crowd ot 800 or moro tn tho track and field avanta at tba T. Manehaeter Green's baas- ban team might have fatted In base- baU to win any Gttea but the young- stera from this aectlon dominated the antlrs nwndng aad won tha grade school-champtonzhlp a fuU 16 pointe ovrt thair nearest rivate.

In the gth grade achoote the Nathan Hale boys regretted that they had but one Ufa to glvo for their aehool and won with tho Rob- ortaea sobool a close aacond. What- ovar thase boys lacked In flnlabod performaacoo they made up In spirit for their rsapeoGve seboete aad wet« aamest in every effort. The summery follows

Kchet (kk Street Mer- cliinU To 84) Wh Orerl ClNiiwjri h Y EtobI

Guido Olorgettl pitched the Oak ctreet merchante to on easy S2 tri-umph over Oieaey Brothara ta the tohto at the Y. M. a A, aoftbaU tounameat at tha T grounds fiat- urday afUrnoon. G ettl^ away to|

Tanka bast the Glaate, 4 gamea to I oca baU out 1. 8UU, there Meme a roy of hope string of bard luck. Ha faanad In ths fact that the pteyen wtU three tlraea bit Into double pteye dlwy up a purse of f {84,094.86.1 twiea Hte prodeceeeero la the roc- arhioB te a racord for a four-game I ord stunt oould hardly boast euoh a affair. I slump as that

Off their play c«Mnrt the l m p . L . ^ « * ? :M Cuba, Gu m . te no sign of the n n ! r ! y . i f o w

long-horaldsd erack-up e tJo* M c-| ,,® ?^ fi^/ .2?M ea^ tt2r*weerd' e ^ y a groat team. Maybe It w|U ehangea ia tha raoortgo on forever, like a eriekat gams. Qomeg’s new mark probably waa

tS ^ r*** "'**•* importanL Up to this flrat-bwman, te suppooed to te on luij been deadiockad onumghte test to|m but yqn eauldn’t da- world aeriso undotaated pitetet3

^ ^ wash, with Jack Coombs, U»e A tM rttaOne of hte fiiirt aeU In the nlath old-Ume atroag-man, and Herb fbn-

iook, the eteeoy hurler of the Taahs ■eat baU ehibe of tha midta PTa Ho turned ia tha load poor por-

TterawM a sort of unofficial COB-1 t a a T a n ^ .P later betest teat Bight trying to pick the U«9 Just-ended eeriro. but hte victary individual Toakaa boro of tha maa- iS S S -•acra It was eaUad off boeauoa U ^25^^ t e a e d to wlad up to a between the supporters of Charley I a ? " ’ ’" * ”

une 0$ BIS naai oow in ine nintn old-u taatog taterday was la nearly nook, break iua nook dlvtng Into the great stands after a foul baU. I He

Oea

Tkte

* teed, the wtanera romped I Ruffing who DltSed"tw^vl^tortee*-1 vlctorice and« ^ t o victory glvto, t t e L T O T O serie. careqr. «<».gut cdga support from atart toJ ^ h . Brennan’s matee bobMad three Gmea and pteyod tooMly In

aM eta2B*fl2d' I t h e A t W e ^MM Frfiiuafi CrOMtU, WtlOM Wmrt. AXwTAllkM. muA afGie field.

Oak fitraat

OtevaUl, 8b . . . ObrrenG, lb . Falkowekl, oe KoeU, 8b . , . . Maddea, af .. Vojaek, e . . . . GaUI, rf . . . . . MoJJer. If . . . Haponik, of .. OeorgetU, p .

whom aroro*credlted with six vlrtof^ spirit in tba first gasM and whose although defeated at aome Gam homo run wreeked Dtezy Dean’s their long aeriee etaita

Tare Recarda TIad, Dlckay whacked four

I flaa effort la the oacond.•haw Great Fowe

Never did a elub morI demonstrate th# vakte of power I—- .bitting than- dM tha Tanka this | ***** matched foiw

'Sglfe rcSSS.’SSSL* rs2Gma end three <>(

They belted 8ve home-run. I l!SS“reita ea JSSrt’ foT S ;A them irirtuell* S»*MreS.ta s fo7r‘gr»e';smr^

to which totereet generally b taoB aa they turn oot t o t e

Bayte d a R u

Tha Tanka, who gave out gg200 ta eaoh. gtfta aad spUt ths rw ' dar Into 80 g-4 shares; win

right to meat Jack Tidball of Loa Angeles in another eemi-final match. Tidball upset Jack Bromwich, tho

|l6215Jfi ap lM w ^ tho Cubs t c 27 ( O f H I

111 upoot Ja< _*<>GGjra Auotraliaa. 6-«, 6-4.009 Wyono -tioaof Wynne of Australia'and

.“ S?*** •****tou ot Franoa tengte to the women’s rtnglea finate. M ta Wynne and Thelma Coyle, an-

doubtes

draw down KSTAa t on fun skaroa ' TTw all-tinia are $4244 aoUected by the botnU T M In IfiSS Whan Stoy heatta CAa and 84286.40 which the « ^ g o t ta loaiiig to the Tanks ni i f i f ..The otrta of the various other

eluhs art |S82fi720 aneb to tha Bsaton Bad fiOa i

,194.71 to

M yard darti. under IS—Bellunn- ^ f t Jaama firati Gme, 8 2 ; Vlaea Nathan Hate, saeond; Oo*> toUa fit. Jamoa third.

Hanning broad jump, under 18— OosteUa f it Jamaa 18 fast 7 toehaa; Johnoton. f it James; Flynn, HotUster; fibsw, Green.

Huantog high Jump—Rohlneoo and t e ^ HoQIatar and Groeb. Gad for

fitevaasen.

88 8 7 31 10 0 (Beneys

AB R H PC A EKen C., 2 b ........ ..8 0 1 1 3Vittner, Sd . . . . . .8 o i o ifiwtek, a s .............S 0 0 0 3Brennan, p ......... 3 0 0 3 1Branniok, lb . . . .8 0 1 8 0Cpwlee, If ...........2 0 1 2 0Solomonsoa sf ..3 0 0 3 0Wtoton, rf ..... 3 0 0 0 0Hermaa 0 ..... 1 0 Q 2 1Lovett e f ........... 2 9 0 3 0

four-maeter off Charlie Root to the eixtb Inning was tha winning run

I of yesterday's gama ootwIthaUnq- tog^tha Cute’ blow-up to the eighth:v-up _ ___

^ blowup, toeldroteUy. com. I p,oyonil Lngue since t^ o e r U sT’ Just when It looked Uke the Cute tin ran wild for 200 far the Osr-

Johnny Evers flrat turned the trick for the Bees to 1914. Ineideatany. Hack's .471 tetUng avoraga tte teries leader, la the highest to

a Pepper N

gat into the ball game.

38Oak fit Merchante

0 4 21 7 8 1 ...302 0040—8

Ken dinate against tha AthleGcs karti to eubeUpite (Silcago catcher, ivSl, end the higheet to bath

hod omaeked a homarun to the flrat Iragnea ilnea Lmi Gehrlgte 239 of the eighth sdth PhU Oavaretto against the Cute to *82. on baas, raduetag tha Tankees' lead Hack’s teammate. Joa Marty, had to 4 to 3, aad the crowd waa root-1 a higher avenga hitting * •••■ tog the vlaltora on, hoping for at|200, but took part to ealy^thneleast one thrUl to the aeriea of die eerica gamea ________

And that was whan the Cute ba- R«d Ruffing, tutntof to taro gan using thair Mtehera to squodC tog vlctoriea aqtete^ta ta rk ror a and tha game became a shamblea tour^game aarlea w a W ha t o » Douhtea \ y Hoag and (aroeetO. I tof.Gx rttohya sandwiched tetweeh- ringles te Dj.lfutHe attempt to aup raa Tanra m

■ .3,

Srrt place, 4 R 4 ktiTTrein, third.

Htajtog high Junto, oror 1 8 - 2«®tato, Greea, f in t 4 R 8 In.; B f id a s ^ HoOiater. aeocad; Kosak

HaOlstsf and Oraao, tiedfOf tUMe

yard droB. fifir I t rinedniiiOiWR f i e R S k T r s S e r t S h t a

F. A. MBBTINOM agta aad Gehrig, two walksa w l l^ t c h by Tex Carletoa, closed^the serlM on a high, hilarious note. I “ *** ^

The Polteh Ajasrlean AthleUeaub WlU hold Ite rsguter monthlyi v> ^ . •*_. a amasting tonight at • o’clock at the I K C yn O M U l S C tS chlbroom oa Ototon street All g v 2 J «,_ a membera are urged to attend aa lAA iaC B T K C C O fQ - ptoas for the farthcomlag baskauwU sMseo WiU ba tbcroughly dte-|xhay1l ba lamamheriar <5Brt R#w-

,“ L ’ s i a ’ s ; ’ j s • •clalOB tetog te ve t|0_alt

aeriea.Of eeuna you caaB <

Yankees’ nerar-hst a a; •d feat of threa aeriea wMeh nmifeod a I

tab

themasivaa erd of six.

Page 6: RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR 'LIES' ABOUT AIR ...

P A O S T E H M A N C H E S T E R E V E N 1N O H T O A L D . M A N C H E 8 T T O . O O N N „ M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 0 , 198S

i N m ^

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Ik r9w«

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bad

BUY CLASSIFIEDS M S

L O S T A N D F O U N D A U 'lt iM O K I i.E S K IIK S A L E 4 K IM IM S W IT H U U 1 H O A R D 59

L O ST — BR O W N w aU d nr . P lc a a t-re tu rn to SOt A d iin a rtre e t. o r ta laphone 4S t i . Raw a itL

IX > ST -4 JU tO B i 8 i m o f m oney, on A rc h o r C en ter a traa t, o r H artford bua. Rew ard . Talepbone 821S.

1937 P O N T IA C town aadan , 19S« P w t la c aedan, 1934 Po n tiac ooacn, 1937 F ord coadta, 1984 F o rd coach, 1934 O ldamob lle aedan. Cote M otora. 4443.

N IC E L Y F U R N IS H E D room fo r one or tw o , ahower, oontlnuoua hot f v t e r , home p rivtleKea , f a ra c a .i l e - - -----le a la o p tio na l. Phone SM 7.

A N N U U M E M E N IS it

W A N TE D —P A SSE N G ER S to H a rt �fo rd . LaavtnK M ancbeater 7:43 a a a , and H artfo rd 4 :30 p . m . Te le- p lKma 1873. .

1933 D O D GE 3-4 ton pane l. 1983 W illya aedan. I M l W lllya ' aedan, IS o ther c a rt . M eaaler Naah In c . lu Henderaon Road . T e l. 7238. O jien even in fa .

F U R N IS H E D RO O M w ith m aa la , a tr ic t iy modern A p t . w ith p ieaaant au rro u n d in ft and good food . 93 Pe a rl a tre e f.

Manchester Erening Herald

C L A S S I F IE DA D V E R T IS E M E N T S

O aaa i a la everaa* •are a m a M � attlala aeahera aad akhraa isiiaa t

taab aawM aa a wer4 aa4 aeaiaeena ’ War 4a aa iw a evrea M ia la iaa aaat la rn laa e ( tare# llaaa

U a e rata# aat 4a r far traaa iaa l— eeUra Marefe I f . a a »

each Cbarea• O aaiaaaUaa Uara . J 7 o a i *

t OaaeaeaUea Dare . . I t a u - U a uO ar .............................. I I I e u U s u

All aeiate let Irreealat laeartianf wtU ha eharaad al iba aa* Uw* raia

‘ ralae rei lane lara avary4aa adeartlalna *i*aa aawa raeaaai. ^A4a erdarad W a r* the taire at ana__ . w ill ha sharaae a a ll f*> iha ae>la a l aea ibat e l ila ia* iha a4 aopaar-

abarn laa a l tba ra ia aaraad bat

• t u

awaaee e* aareada eaa be ma4* etaaaa4 eflar the

fara ie a*i m aa lar llaaa ee lThe karaia will aei be raapeatibia

lee war* ihaa ea* la*orr*ei leecrtiaB a l aa f a4**rtia*m**i *r4*r*e far

ita•eriaai aaiaataa

aaai •aMiaailaa a( alaarllalaa •III ba aeaiia i l aaly by aeaaallailae al ihaabara# wa4a far ta# aarvlaa raMarad

All adrartiaamaat* waei aanferim a iyK aaay aad lyaeara’ltby • lib am ata l la t a«rar*ad by lb* yebllab.

they fae«r»» laa riaht le aay anyy aao-wvtaa M r*Jae<

•4 amaeiwaabla ■Uio ROVRS-Oaeaiaad

ea ba yeb lleead eawa day waa i •a m d be U a'alacb eaaa i aa ierdaye

IB L B P B O N B Y O U R W A N T A O S

TS a ix a aba*e ea ad»ar*ieara bal

m JU L F tarm BC T m aaad #• iha bMI- mam a B ^ • • a t aadaaa Iba aaraa ib ima Wil law w eba a*w taa in la» a l

S b m •M il W* aa flaoi aa W* raae-nal- inmw «rw aa w taiaat.a«ae ada • m i W> ewaamaa awa lAaU aaaaraaa

M O V I N I .- ^ I H l i f K I N U —S T O K A l iE 211

A P A K I'M E N I S — P L A T S — T E N K M E N 1S M

A U ST IN A C H A M toBKS when you want the oeel In Lo ca l ana' Ln ity D istance M oving D a ily buiprear H artfo rd . H an e b rste r, tto c av iii* Phone 634U 48 H o llU ter it r M t

F O R R E N T —7 W A U C ER a tr*e t , co m er Ee a t C en ter, Sve room s, ga>' reg e , steam h eaL Phone 4484.

F O R R E N T —S IX RO O M tenem ent, w ith ateam heat, 80 Spruce a tre eL A p p ly 14 Spruce stre e t o r Phone 4543.

L E G A L N U I'I C E S

E*e.,

P A I N T I N Ir — P A P E K I N f i 21

P K U P E K T T O W N ERS - A tte n t io n 84.93 repapere room , ce illnb paper ed or Kalsom ined M ateria l, laoo i com p lete insid e outside painttng Larg e eavinaa W ork g iiaranteea L*ag. Phone 3693 or 3344.

F O R RB3N T —4 RO O M tenem ent, ateam heat, a ll Im provem ents, g a �rag e . In q u ire 33 F lo re n c e stre e t.

AT A COURT o r PROBATS HELD at MancliMter, wtthin and for th* Olatrlcl of Manchaittr, on tha lOlb day o f Oetqnar, A. D.. l i l t .

Froaaot W ILLIAM A HTDC.Judga.

Eatat* o f Marla S. Duguot iai* of ManehtaUr, In aald DIatrIct, dteaaard.

Th* Executor having axhtbitad hJa admlnlarratlon account with aald ay- tata to thia Court for allowanca. It la

ORDERED:—Thai tha IStb day of October A. D., 1911, at t o'clock forenoon, at th* Probate Olflc*. In aald Manch**tar. b* and th* same la aaaignad for a hearing on th* allow , anc* of aald admlnlatratlon aoeount with aald aatata. and thIa Court dl- raeta tho Exacutor to g iv* public no. tlea to all paraona InKraaUd tharain to appaar and ba haard theraon by pnbifabing a copy o f thia ordar In aoma newapaper having a circulation In aald Dlatrlct, five daya befor*

hearing and return mak* to thU Court.

W ILLIAM t. HTDE H-ld-14-ll. ' fudg*.

I SERIAL STORY

M URDER T O M USICBY N ARD JONES

c e rvR i« M r. IM 4MM SRRViel. INO

OAST o r C H ABACTBB8 M Y B N A DOMBBV — IwrotaM.

W ife o f the erweatloaial iw tag bsad

R O B E R T T A T T hero . N ewspap er photographer —i l ete c t i ve .

A N N E U5STEB— Slym a’a doaeat friend.

D A N N IE F E B LE Y — oSleer as-signed to Investlgato Lndden Uond- bey’s murder. *

Veeterdayi Ta lt and Anne Itnd M ym n in an nbandoned onMn nnd bring her bnefc to the elty to faee the moalc. Ta lt vows to help her na- tU tho end.

F O R R E N T —F IV E ro o m .f la t , w ith � team h ea t, a ll Iro provcro cnts. In �

qu ire SO P ine s tre e t

AT A COURT o r PROBATE HELD at Manchaater, within and for tha Dlatrlct of Manchaatar. on tha Ith day of October, A. D.. t i l l .

Pr � ----------- --

C H A P T E R V n

K K P A IK I N G 2.'IF O R R E N T — F IV E room tenem ent, w ith a ll Im provem ents, C o m er K e r �ry and Un ion atree tA T e l. 4047.

M O W ER S H A K I'E N L N U . repa inng Vacuum c ieaaere dcoDdiuonea Key m ak ing , lo ck rep k irin g ta le com n ination cDangtng Bra itb w a iu 33 Pe arl stre e t

F O R R E N T — F IV E room lo w er f la t a ll Im provem ents, 333, Inc lud ing g arag e . A va ila b le N ov. 16th . ISU Sum m it stre e t . T e l. 4441.

A U T O T O PS . C U R T A IN S , lug gsge , dog c o llars and harm ae rep a irin g . Cbaa La k in g , 90 Cam bridge etreet. Te lephone 4740.

F O R R E N T —O C T . 16th ., flve room f la t , A ra l flo or on H a lnea stre e t . A p �p ly 21 Rueee ll stre e t .

R E U P H O LS T ER iN O and fu rn itu re rep a ire d , spring e retied and cuen- lona reflUed . J . J . H illm an , iv Spruce stre e t . Te lephone 8444.

H O l iS K N K O K K K M A.S

W E S P E C IA U Z E In roo flng anh a id ing . .W orkm ansh ip guaranteed . T im e paym ents arrang ed . P a in t �in g and c a rp e n try .,A . A . D ion In c . >1 W e lls stre e t. Phone 4840.

F O R R E N T - 7 RO O M houaa, a ll Im provem ents, spac ioua grounda ..L ready fo r occupancy O c t. 13th . tn - ^ qu ire 109 H ig h e tree t.

r*»*nt W ILUAM 8. HTDE. E*o.. Judge.

Eitat* of Franc** Btfuff of Man- chaator. In *ald Dlatrlct. minor.

Th* Guardian having redgntd aald truat and having exhibited her ac-count with aald aitat* to thi* Court for allowanciA It I*

ORDERED:—That th* Utb day of October A. D.. I t i ( at » o'clock for* noon, at th* Probata OfTIc*, In aald Manch**t*r, b* and th* *am* I* aa-aignad for a hearing on th* allow-ance of aald account with aald eatate. and tha appointmant of a aucceaaor guardian and thia Court dlracta pub-lic notice ba given to all paraona In- Careatad tharain to appear and ba haard tharaon by publlahlng a copy of thia order In aoma nawapapar hav-ing a circulation In aald Dlatrlct. hva daya before aald day of hearing and return make to thia Court.

W ILLIAM 8. HYDEH-io-io-ai. ■''''>•••

F O R R E N T —4 RO O M a ln g le , w l l ^ . a ll Im provem ents, a t 83 U ar^ a tf stre e t. In q u ire on prem ises q r te la- ' phone 8194.

AT. A COURT OF PROBATE HELD .airGlancheater, within and for th* U la tr l...................

Eaq.,

R(M )FIN O A N D std lng . pa inting carp e n try and masnn w ork Kea � onable T im e paym ents arrang eo

W Vanoour. S3 W e lle stre e t. Phone tSS3 .

.S E V ER A L M O D ER N s la room � ingle bouses, a lso tw o tan u iy

fla ts m eace lient lo c a t io n s A p p ly Ed w ard J H o iL ta iephone Man- cbeatet 4443 o i 8U36

H K I .H W A N IK f )— F K M A I .K 95

E IG H T RO O M S I N G LE , steam h ea t, g arag e , gard en . In q u ire 43 F loren ce e tre e t

i N o u o rC L U B t f K A T I O N B

W A N TED — G IR L to ta ke c are o f3 years old child. Light bouaeclean- Ing and light cooking, sleep tn nights. 130 month. Position tn Brooklyn, New York. Call 7282 Be-tween 3:30 and 6 p. m.

H IM M 4M H A I .B TZ

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A.OTO fOO *•••••• #Lwto Bspw»rlHr—PBiB iitt# •••••• 1Awt* CclMelo ............................... f-A

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Cin*f4 ..*,* IIBoy*«Hbal« SarrlcM CMTBtw# ••••II*A......iriono i^ »|lM rM rty« , , , ,FsHBryJ D lrocior* .................L 11R g P) om M n Rm fl WA......................If llltb oryM ovtng ~ -Trucking -Atorog*Pub lic pRBMrig*r A*rvloc *•Pglnilng—>PBi»Brtiig ............ProfoM loAAl Borviccg * . •• �Ropgirthg ........................ra llortA g —Dr«ing>-ClBAMBg ToUot Good* RNd . . .W%nt»d~BuEtn*M ,

1«.•a 11• •• II• •• n• •• II• •a I I• .. Ha • • * A• a. t)• •a I I• •• II• e. t«• ■• SI

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Bouraee ajx* c u «*m ...................... | i^ v a u iBM-sattoB* ................. t lDaoelna ................ . . I l .aMualeal—Draautte .................... itWani*4—InairiH-fiim* ............... M

PtABse ia lBoadA ■ I dioeAw*—llongRg Bu iIh a m OpaortoniHoc Ifoncjr to Lo r o

•• • «• IIa • • a • a I I......... u

^ Me Io RAd ■llwatlwM■olP Wont«d'*FRmRlo .............. |gBala Wantad .............................. it“ •'•••MO W.ai*d ...................... le-ABalt Warned—Mai* Or Female.. H^ * D i* Wani*d ........................11-ABItuallvo* W*nt*d—F*mal* . . . . II•liuatloa, W*ni*d—Mai* .......... I|Xmptnvm»n, aa*n*i», 4C|Jv* e t*ra .-l*,t, "Portbl i Vablrlr,D us*— Bire*— P »i* ...................... ..U v * Sloek— V^hiei** ................... 4}Poultry and Sappll** .................Wanted— p -**— Pi.ultry—jitoek 44

Fof a * l»— IHar*llaBe«aaAH Icl** Fm Sal* ........................... 41Boala and acrasacrl** ............ *4Bulldine Malarial* ................... 47Dlatfoad*— W *te fc ,»__ j,w ,| ,^ . . 41Elaetrloal Appliancaa Radio 4tFu*l and F**d ..................... | » .aOard*a— Farm— Dairy Producta Ift BouM bold 0 < ^ * . .................... .M*ehlD*i7 and Tool* ................. ||

fM utieal Inatr«iB*nU ........... 13nic* aad Store Equipaoet 44B*elal* *t tk* Stor** ................. u

.............. * ’Wgiitod^wTo Bap

* “ *f4 .............. I� • • 't » " „ 7F M i*d ............................. U -0 *lu t^B n ard -R *M >n a------- ^ (5 ? * * ]? r ’ *2“ * " ' “ ** ................ — 'Waat*4—Room*—Board 1

h— I ■**•4* Fa* ■oat Aaaftmeeu Plata ToBameata « (•aalsaa tM lta a i IM lUal . . . 1« • • f * .................... .. (•eborkaa Pot Ram ........... i■uBOMf Homa* For Raat , . . . « * (Waaud U Raoi ........................ 1

Raal C*iat* r ** Bal*kparunaai Building far gal* BuotBoao Property for Sal* . . Farm* aad Load iM Sato . . .Boa*** (or Bala ___________Lota fat Sai*- --- - • - ^ -wVoV a•••••••

ItagblAeeelea

Nottaosl egol Bwtaaa

•••••«•••••••••»«

lUk Heriy Adfs,

H K I . F W A N IK U ~M A l .k .tn

W A N TE D — C A R P E N T ER S . C a li H a rry Ry lan d ar, 34 H aynes a tre cL Te lephone 8394.

L I V E S 1T K K — V K H i n .R .<4 4?

FOR SALE— NEW Milch cow. Ap-ply 21 Rueaell street.

A R T I C L E S F O R S A I .E 4.5

FOR SALE Very good 4337.

ENGLISH COACH condition. Telephone

F I I E l A N D F E E D IH

ONE HALF CORD Foui foot sea aoned wood sawed atove icngtn 35.00 'ellvered. L T. Wood Co Phone 4494

H O I lS E H O I . i l M N ID S 51

HUNDREDS OF USED Furniture bargains. 3 rooms furniture 373. Easy te~ms. Phone or write tor a "Courtesy A u to" Aloerta Furni-ture Co., Waterbury, Conn

FOR S A LE -C R A W F O R D range equipped with oil burners. In good Condition Reasonable price. For further Information dial 3008.

FOR SALE—O IL HOT water heat-er. Call 6851.

GOOD USED COAL ranges 310.00 up. some with oil burners 3'JU.'tip. \Vatk:n« Bros. Inc., 11 Oak street.

FOR .SALE— STUDIO davenport, slightly used. Makes Into double bed. Was 349 60, now only 324.93. Kemp's Inc.

M .5 I H I N E H Y A N D IT N II N 57

O LIVER LOW DOWN manure apreaderr, several makes of used and rebuilt tractors, used tractor plows and harrows. Dublin Tractor Co., Providence Rd., WlUlmantlc.

We A re Now List in g Real

. Esta te For F a ll Sa le

I f TOO h a v e � f a r m , h o m e o r a c re a g e a t re a s o n a b le p iic B B w e w i l l t i7 an d m o ve I t f o r y o o . T ra d e s a rra n g e d . 3 a a le s m c n . C u s t o m e rs w d it in f f .

EDW . J . H O LLR e a lt o r

M S M a l n S L T t L 4 «4 2

s r w «.R fX lM HOUSE, tins cem- deODai 'hatnet .411 impmviimaiiLa: for price and rkrina oiiunnune iiltM or call at l id Senum -it. iMn-ga u. Flab.

Iitrict of Manchratar. on th* Ith day of October, A. D.. 1911.

Prasant WILIAM 8, HYDE.J udg*.

Escat* of Cam * B. Lull lata of Manchaatar, In aald District, dacaasad.

On motion of .Nalll* M. Lull of said Manchaatar administratrix.

OHDEHED:—That six month* from th* Ith day of Octob«r, A. D.. 1911 b* and tba lam* ar* llmitad and allowed for tba craditor* within which to bring In Ibair claims against said *a- tat*. and tb* aald administratrix la dirseted to gIv* public nolle* to tn* ersdltor* to brtag la . th«lr cUim* witbia said cua* ailowsd by soaring a copy oC t/ibi untar oa tb* public 4ign post nourvac to tho' oJao* wsar* tho tmiauowd luoc dwalx wl-hin su:d ! tu'vn Uiil Uy nunilnftinif Uto sa.-no ta I ■vmn lowsnauBr .laving a oimulaLiua ' n w ill amiiaio tlatriui, wiuun ^an

ftriin 'l i» .inci* iC thia -irdt,*. ajiii i-ntiim natiB :o Ilia umir'- of iho nu- Ira env-n.

W Il,L i.tl» A O’? UK.Imlko, :

U - lb - lb - .'l. I

A lm o st three houre la te r . Ju st the lit t le c o q ^ w as crosatng the n orth d t y lin U ts , M ym a aw a lw p ed on A n n e 's sh o u ld er., Th e dawn w b reak in g Into fu ll d ay , and the s p ir ita o f the . tr io rose w ith the sun . Th e b la ck h o urs In * and n ear th a t h ille id e sh a c k Burne d to T a lt lik e a bad dream .

H e turned to M ym a . 'T e e lln g bet �t e r? "

" Y e a ---- a U tt le .”" A n n e and I have decided you

shou ld Bleep some m ore , though— In m v ap artm en t. A n o ther 30 m in �u tes and w e ll be th ere .”

B u t when T a lt a rriv e d a t h is ap artm en t b u ild in g he decided th a t cau tio n wou ld be the b e tter p a rt o f v a lo r. Inste a d o f p ark in g n ear the e n tra n c e , w ay , be drove around to the a lle y .

*T'm go ing up and have a lo ok . I t m ay be th a t D ann ie F e e le / a got auap lcloua and baa someone w a it �ing fo r m y re tu rn . Yo u g lr la a lt t ig h t here in the c a r . " H e grinned a t M ym a . " A n d I eap ect to And you here when I g e t' b a c k ."

She m anag e d 'to re tu rn a sm ile . "PU be h ere ,” she sa id .

T a i l h urrie d up th e b ack s t a ir �w ay o f the ap artm e nL slo w in g down o n ly when he reached h ia flo or. Q u ie t ly t e opened the door fro m the b ack lan d in g In to the long h a ll. T o M s re lie f , no p e tro l �in g stra n g e r w as In s ig h t . N ever- the lcaa he- w en t down the b a ll w ay to hsten be fore , h ia door.

L i r n s H H * > *A i R n

EL IZ A B ET H P A R K 3E C T H Iiy . Bu ild ers and apm iu iatora u re n u n n . 4 Iota, H enry . N orth E m and Tan �ner stre e ts. 3t 0 fro n t f t . In q iure 171 Tan n er stre e t.

L E G A L N «rr i < EM

A T A C f i f l l T O F p r o b a t e H E L D a JilRnchgAtiir, wUhirt An<l f<Sr tn^ IMutrlrt f.( on thA■lay o f Ortob#r, A. D.. 19%^.

F*rFgcnt. W I L I A M S. M TD K K «a * JvidR#.

Katate o f Wlll iRm B Lu l l tAt« o f .Vlanch^st^r, in tald DUtrict .€ d ‘

On rrxjtton o f M Lull o f fRldWafn'tie flt^r Rdm in l i tra tr iz

OKt*K liK l> “ ^Thai « la months from ho ith day o f Octobsr. A- D* M i l ’

tiS and th* iarr.* ars l imitad and s l « i 'jRad for th* 'rradtlors wtth!n which (o hrlOK In. thair clatma scstnat ss.d

and thp aald a d m ln l i t f s t r tx • .* Jlrtct^d to Siv* public notics , *o | tl,B rr^diror* u, brlrir hn thstr r ls lm * w l iMn «a id Mm« sMowad by po tt lnc s ! copv o f thi* o fd « r on th* nuhllo s^cn DOit n*ar*\t ro th* pls£* wbars t.hs d*c*aa*d U i t dw «I t hrithin atlld town ! ind by rxiMi^hlng th* fa m * In som* newipapar having a c ircu ts l lor In •Sid probat* diatrlri, w ith in t«n, ’ dsys Trom th* dat^ ' - t this o rd*r and r* » turn make to ihl|i *ou f l o f th* not(cs Kiv*n.

WILLIAM HTDE/udg*.

I A T A o n im r -i f pTu m strH g g i .a It w t it iin «nit f t ir tins

! U istrtc i ‘If jluno}i«m i4«r. in U la dUi � lav 'It •Wdtiijmr. A. D.. IMH.

. I 'Kfirn.IVimt Xat.iTa* ii-ty o f A iiw *t W.

, ^ ist MtA 'Vt >lAn(*.n44s t*r. in S4ai<t U ia

I Assulhig *:(A :tu t44 ItsI an.ooa; s^Cfiunt wtea Sa»i<t - 4SCAt* lo i c a:4 O huft for «.U>’»sn e4. ic

'>Ki>tcftk:u w- T A a c tS4 n t h day o f | O stoh sr . A. D . n i i . St 1 f it lc r .U 1 fofsnooft, at th4 Offios. in *tAWt MAfwa4S'4r oo an<C ehs sams is assigned fo r a Assr^ng on a l low * anc4 o f t s . i sdm:ntsrrsttow a^eount v i th saM *s*.af4. sn4 ta^s C o « r t 41* f4ocs th4 T r is fA s to g^ss no*tie# to a l l p4r*rans iacsrssUd t l i4r«ln to spp4sr a rd h# r»4ari eh#r«oA by pubtiahisg s '-opy o f usis o rde r In tom# n#wtpsp#r ha r tng a circulation In sa{d D is trUL ftv# days be fore said day o f A4sr.ng end r s t a m make to this Court.

w i l l i a m , I. HTDCiudgSa

Su d d en ly he stoppetL Th e door o f b is ap artm en t ,waa aU g htly a ja r : T e n ta ttv e iy he pushed i t open aad Inuked insid e— and w as a maxed to *ee. seated in U a e o i e asy c h a ir . H a rr is B o g era ’

'W e a r ' ha trte d te keep the a»- g er Cram h lii vo lca . " T o o 'rh an e a r ly —sb a a • « aay a a a a r ly c a O er? "

an g e rs so t op . shru g g in g n u e frm 'd ers and stra ig h te n in g lua c o lla r . " B e t t e r caD m a a g u est, la it - 'The fa c t la . I ’ve been here an B ig h t ." H e sm ile d , no t unp iim aanUy. "Yo u see . I cam e la s t n ig h t. You h ad n 't a rr iv e d , and 1 persuaded tne Ja n ito r th a t 1 w as a frie n d o f Jroura. t hope 1 d id n ’t exa g g era te , T a lt . "

* T t 'i not n ecessary to exag g era te w ith the Ja n ito r I f you ’ve a 33 b ill,” T a lt aa ld .

*T re a lly expected th a t yo u ’d re �tu rn —and then somehow I fen

I asleep tn th a t v e ry co m fortab le I c h a ir. I hope jro u 'll fo rg ive m e. B u t I under i a l l th e c irc u m sta n c e e .. i I H ia vo ice traU ed o ff, and he made I a geature w h ich aa ld th a t T a l t wou ld I unq uestio nab ly und erstan d .I “ W h at can I do' fo r y o u ? ” T a lt

w as s t i l l stan d in g . H e w as puzsied a t Ro g ers' c urio us v is it , w as n erv �ous about the tw o g ir ls In the c a r . Suppose th ey g rew d isturb ed a t h is long absence , and w a lke d into the a p artm en t to In v e st ig a te ? "X—x d on 't w an t to ru sh yo u . Ro g ers. B u t the fa c t la . I ’ve a n ‘ e a r ly im po lnt- m en t."

" I g e t th e Id ea . B u t 1 3ea*t q u ite 'aee bow It wou ld he lp to etop in �vest ig a t in g D o m b eys m urd er. X’m a fra id tX iat D ann ie .F e e le y co u ld n 't aee yo ur erg u m enL” ‘^ N atura lly n o t Th e p o lice ' w y i keep on in ve s t ig a t in g . R u t It 's a t o u ^ case . Yo u know tb a L Xt m ay aUde a lo ng fo r co nsid erab le U m a ."

Th e •p ho to grap her am lied . " In o th er worde , yo u flg ure th e t the fe w er who e re m tere e te d ,’ me you p u t i t a m om ent ag o , th e leas chance o f g e tt in g the re p u ta tio n o f Dom bey and th e band d irt ie d u p ."

" T h a t la i t p re d a e ly . ' I thougnt you 'd aee I t m y w a y . "

W H l ACT TO COLLECT OVERDUE OLD AGE TAX

C o l le c t o r H e ld B y L a w T o Is * s a e W a rr a n t s A g a in s t D e l in �q u e n ts I n T h e T o w n .

A g a in Ro g ers anU|ed . " I w o n 't be long . H e re 's th e p o in t, T a l t I'v e known you fo r q u ite a w h ile , and I ’ve a lw a ys lik e d yo u . Som ehow X go t th e im preaa lon , down th ere a t the P a c if ic P la xa la s t n ig h t th a t you w ere in tereste d in th ia te rrib le b usin ess.”

" In te re ste d T H ow do you m ean? "" W eU , c urio u s, th en . I can un �

d erstan d t h a t A f t e r a l l , yo u 're a new spap er m an b y tra in in g . Yo u 've been a t i the fln lah o f a lo t o f th in g s lik e th is . B u t th is la one th a t X w o u ld n 't g et w orrie d ab o u t. B o b ."

Tb e se e m in g ly m ild sug g estion sta rt le d " T a lt . "Y o u —yo u 're not g iv �in g me w am ln g ,*'are y o u ? ”

“ O f course n o t .” H a rr is Ro g ers laughed d isp ara g in g ly . " It 'a Ju st a fr ie n d ly U p . A n d . fra n k ly , It ’a fo r m y sak e as ^ e ll aa y o u rs .”

"1 s e e . . . . ” T a l t drew c ig are ta fro m h is p o cket and o ffered tbe p ack to Ro g ers. Th e n , c a re le ss ly , he cloeed the door lnt> the b a ll. T iim ln g , he sa id , " N o w w e 're get- Ung aom ewhere . W h a t's re a lly on yo ur m in d ? "

“ Ju s t th is . A s you kno w , I m an �aged Dom bey h im se lf—aa w e ll aa T h e Sw ln g a te era . F d lik e to aee the band go on , both because i t meane a good sp o t fo r m e, and because o f —o f M rs. D om bey. Po or lA id la dead . I don’ t k flo w who k ille d h im . r d lik e to g e t m y hands on h im — but I th in k It 's m ore Im p o rtan t to keep th in g s g o ing fo r th e g ir l ne loved . A nd F m te llin g yo u , T f l t , It th ey s t a r t In ve st ig a t in g a l l e ve r tbe p lace th ere ’l l be a bad m ess ot p u b lic ity . T h a t w ou ldn ’t be good fo r e ith e r th e g ir l o r h er b usin ess."

“ H e r b u F a c a a ?”co urse jrou d id n 't know—

b u t D om bey made h er a p artn e r m Sw ln g a te era . Sh e 's lia b le fo r tne debts o f a c orp ora tio n , and tn ere are p le n ty .” Ro g ers he ld h is p a lm s u pw ard . " I tr ie d to c o n tro l Lu d , but he w as Im p ossib le when he w as on a spend ing spree . N ever rea lise d th a t th e m oney co u ld n 't la s t fo r �eve r. B u t w ith lu c k , T a l t , X can brin g th in g s In to shap e , keep M ym a fro m g e ttin g in to a m esa, and prob �a b ly m ake h er w e a lth y ."

T a lt w as s ile n t a m om enL Th e n :

T a lt shook h ia head . *Bu t 1 don’ t aee I t yo u r w a y , Ro g ers. In th e f irs t p lac e , tbe moat lo g ic a l susp e c t th a t the p o lice have r ig h t now ta M rs. D om bey. U n t il th ey can g e t some leads e lsew here ahe'a g o ing to have a bad U m e . In tha second p lac e , X'm n o t a t a ll c e rta in th a t sh e 's In te re s t �ed In tb e m oney you can m ake fo r h er w ith Lu d 's reputeU tm and h is band— ”

" D o yo u kno w b ar w e ll enough to ba aura o f t h a t? ” R o g ars w anted to kn o w . :T t o c c urs to m e U u lt th e ir acq ua in tan ce be fore m arria g e w as ra th e r a h o rt "

Ig n o rin g the re m ark , T a lt pro �ceeded : “ In the tXUrd p l M , Ro g ara , an I h ave is yo ttr w ord th a t Dorn- b ey's a f fa irs a re tai a m esa and th a t b is p ast m ig h t n o t " lo ok w e ll in p r in t .”

" A n d you doubt m y w ord . la th a t I t ? "

‘T fo r-n o t Ju s t y e t , a t a n y ra te . Yo u m ig ht g ive some notion o f w h a t jrou m ean and then I ' l l be g lad to teU yo u w he th er I'm wUUng to be �lie ve IL ”

Ro g ers' fa c e d arkene d . " A U r ig h t , T a l t I can t e ll jtou p le n ty .^ . T {m m anag er o f ThS Sw ln g ateera , drop �ped In d o le n t ly to th e arm o f the c h a ir . " I th in k th a t when I'm fin ish �ed you ’U be rea d y to fo rg e t th a t la id D om bey w as k ille d .'’

(T o B a C im tlm M d)

T a x C b le c to r Sam ue l N e lso n , J r ,, announced to d ay th a t sh o rt ly he w in by la w h ave to . hand o ver te oonstab lea fo r co U ec tior tb e ram a ln- In g tm pa ld o ld age aaatatance tea acco u nts, due fo r paym ent aa o< F e b ru a ry 1, 1988. U nd er eo llecUoa proceedure , the o rig in a l $8 t a x , w tU a 8X p e n a lty p lus co lle c tio n chargeeo f 37 w in am o unt to 3X1 In totaX

m tu te a ,U nd er tbe p rov isio n s o f the the CoU ector h as no o th er altenuM t iv e th an to tu rn d e llq uent ta x w ar �ra n ts o ve r to o ffle e n i o f tb e la w tat a c t io n .

N eb o n sta te d to d ay th a t he haa m a iled w am ln g a to aU who are de �lin q u en t In m ak in g p aym ent, and th a t I f persons are unab le to m ake a re tu rn th ey shou ld ap p ea l fo r Uef to tbe Bo ard o f Se M ff'" w h ic h U the o n ly body te g a iu powered to e ffe c t postponeme ‘ abatem ente o f o ld a g s taxe s .

Tb e CoUector aa ld th a t he some req uests fo r postponem ent o f p aym en t, but th a t fala p ow e ie are � tric t ly lim ite d , and th a t those un �

ab le to m eet o ld age taxe s shou ld go d ire c t ly to th e Se lec tm en and g e l a u th o rta a t lo o .fo r an ab atem ent, t ^ to avo id th e pena lU ea th e la w pro �v id es fo r non-paym enL

RICH MAN, POOR GIRL GAT COMEDY AT STATE

R o b e r t T o a n g , R o t h H n s s e y S t a r I n U r e l y P ic t u r e O p e n �in g T o m o rro w .

HPSY DRIVERS CONDEMNED IN COURT TUCKERS’

Pueb lo , C o lo .— (A P )—T h e b o* o f- flee w iU be la c k in g , b u t o th erw ise Pueb lo c o urts aeon w U I ba In the m ovie fie ld .

D is t r ic t A tto rn e y R a lp h I* . N e ary p lana to ta k e o m vles on th e scene when a person la arre ste d fo r drunken d riv in g . C o urtro o m s are be ing equipped to abow tb a " f lic k - e ra .”

'A d e fendant u su a lly baa aebered up and Is in a p resentab le cond ition b y th e tim e he ap p ears In c o u rt ,” sa id N e a ry . " Th e o ff ic e r's w ord th a t the m an w as Into id eated fre �q u en tly ta the o n ly te e tim o ny th a t can be o ffered .

" M o tio n p ic tu re s w lU show tb e de �fen d an t a s be m p e are d a t th e scene o f the a rre s t and a t thtlo n .d lf f lc y lt

th e p o lice sta - T h ls ao rt o f evidence wtU be

to re fu te .”

W han th e houae Is a lre a d y too fa n f o r c o m fort th e ad d ition o f a v ls t to i la a p t to th ro w , e ve ry th in g o u t ot w a c k—and when the v is it o r la a m illio n a ire w llU n g to s le e p on th s p a r io r ao fa a s In “ R ic h l ls n . Poor O ir i,” com ing to tbe S ta te Th e a te r, th e ta ’s bound to ba m irth g a lo rs .

A n d m irth th ere Is , fo r th s m ll- ,U o na lre is p o p u lar R o b ert Young who m oves In on the fa m ily o f Ru th H u ssey to co nv ince them th a t ba deaervea h er hand In m arrlA g a . W hen he beg ins to c la sh w ith C o usin F ra n k , as p la jred b y L,ew A yre a ,. be le ara a a lo t o f fin m y th in g a he n ever knew ab o ut peop le arlth m oney. F in a l ly ha thraa te n a to g ive a w ay a l l h is m oney to e arn th e re q je c t o f th a T h a jre r fa m l ^ . and a ll th a t does la to b rin g them hU ario ua ly c lam orin g ab out h ia earn to p reven t the d isa s te r.

Su p p ortin g p la jre rs In th a exesl- le n t c a s t a re G uy K ib b se , R it a Jo h n - aon and l-an a T f lm e r . H m new com edy is baaed on the Bro a d w ay sta g e aucceaa, " W h ite O oUar^ ' b y E d ith E U ls and w as d irec te d by th e w e ll-kn o w n Eh iro p e iu i d ire c to r, Re ln ho ld Sch u n ze l.

AT A I O l ' I l T OF PKOBATF, HF-I-D If .M»nrh(«t*r. wlihtn 4nf1 fo r th*

or .N(4nch*«t*r, on th* I th ■ Juv of Ori'.hwr. A. D-. J i l l .

\\1LU AM ft. H YD E . K»<1.

KitBt* o f Jftm** L«nnrin la t* o f MArich4st«r. In b a M D lt t i ie t , 4*c*A*«d.

On rr.f'ilon o f Th* M i in ch * i t « r T r u i t r.jfnrttnv adminlBirmtor

o H O K H K f i — *1* month* from th* Mh flay o f tjf 'tober. A- D-. 111! be arid lh « aanif-.Ar* i imlted and #1- lowed fo r th* r r e d u o r i w ith in which to brln*: In ti^eir c la im* EKalnst M id ratal*, and the aald admtniBtrator t* dlrerted to g ive public no l le * to th* credttora la bring In th t i r chtlm* w iih in said t lm* Allowed by poatlng a copy o f thJ* order on th* public RiKn pf>*t n*are«t lo the ptac# where the det;eaii*d laat dw e l t w ith in M id town and by publlahlng tha M m # tn tom* newspaper having a circulation In *aid probat* dlatrlct. w tthin ten daya from th* dat* o f thi* order, and return rrtake vo this court o f th* no-l le* g iven. ^

W I L L I A M 8.

H-ld-IO tl.

HYDEJudge.

AT A COURT o r RROBATE HELD at Mahj!t.««t«r with}* and for th* Diitrict of Manchaatar. on th* Ith day of Octobar, A. D . 1111.

Pr***nt W ILUAM fl. HTDE. £*q.. Jiidg*.

fUtat* of Mary Jan* McCann lat* of Manoh*at«r, In aald DUtrlct, d*- eaavad.

On motion of Tha Manch**t«r Truat Company admlnietraior }

ORDEItED>-"Thai alz month* from th* Ith day of October, A. D-. 1111 b* and th* *am* ar* llmitad and allow. *d for tb* craditor* within which to bring In th«lr claim* against aald **• (at*, and th* aald administrator la dir«ct*d to g iv* public notle* to tha creditor* to bring In their claim* within said tima allowed by posting a copy of this ord*r on th* public •Ign post nearest to th* plae* wh*r* Iha deceased last dwelt within aald town and by publlahlng tha Mma In aom* newspaper having a circulation In Raid probate dlatrlct. within ten daya from tha dat* of thia ofdar, and return mak* to thia court of the notto* given.

WILU.AM ft HYDE Judg.a

H-lO-lO-lte

N O A R O C M C N 'T H E R B

N ew O rlesn s—B i l l K lrc h e m , 315- pound T u lsn e ta c k le , ran the 100- ysrd dash In 10 f la t In s v a rs ity tra c k meet Is s t sp rin g , w h ich causes Io cs] exp erts to b e lieve he Is the fse te a t ta c k le In c o lle g ia te fo o tb a ll.

H OLD EVERYT H IN G B y C f y d . L « w ia

FLAPPER F A N N Y B y S y lv iaenLieM eTsuKenei.BHL t . m ii kSLSMT.eW^.

a X » • “(. 7 > • »C - > * 3 U * i *1

1. * 3 X V » F

m -

ie - / e

“ O h , A lb e r t , is n ’ t th a t c u t e ? T h e y ’ re w e k u i i i i i iK u s w it h o n e o f t h e ir f o lk d u h e e s r

“ B u t -yo u E A C H w e re t o w r i t s a th e m e o n ’ H o w I W o u ld n v e e t $ 5 0 0 ’ . ’ ’

“ Y e s ’ m , b u t w e f ig u re d w e c o u ld m a k e m o re o n $ 1 ,0 0 0 ,' s o w e p o o le d i t , ” >

MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE Another Prisoner By THOMPSON AND COLL

A V JDW H ITE V , SC O U TIW C j

" T H E 5 P I O E O S * B O E D E R h i d e -o u t

IM A M A M - T IO U A T E D IB A IM a J A P L A K IE ,A R £ K 3R C E D D O VkAJ J U S T O U T - • S D E T H e B A U D fTS f 0 3 B IZ A 1. . X A V S A 'PR S * "TE M D S 1 H C A S .00 M E TO F IN D O U T I F X O V ia LA 1/ E 3& , UA40 IS B E lM O i H E U D F D Q . lU A lS O M , IS A L M S . . ..

TV4R U 'T H E B S D O O a .M y 1 n Z A K JS - L O V IE W H .L B E I M O S' O LA D T S 6 E SO U J

X "

A A VBA f *THAT B O R D E S A tSARKE# | y / E SM A / IM T H E

W H ITES(W /E> ^ O O T T D O E T W ORD S A C K ‘TO

Ja C K ,O U IC H .f

8 0 5 S O U a r e IM tA/rTH T H E S E FILTW V BA M * D lT S ,1 D O / '

M O , A A ISS U X JE R S y VUE’ VE ; COAAC T Dh e l p s o u O E T

B E M S O K l- 1 T H IM K i s b e s t W E K E E P L E E T U E AAVRA M ERE . W H ILE W H ITEV C O E S B A C K F D A T H ’ AAOMEV - T H E M W E AAAK' S U R E H E O C O A AE B A C K / J

SENSE and N O N SEN SE------------------------------------------

" B a c k w a rf l. tu rn h M kw ard . o f tim e . In th y f l ig h t A m srs 'H o o v e r'' depreaa loa T d g iv e t w ith d e l i c t . "

Th e m an a t the th e a te r w as noyed b y tb s e o n v tn s t lo n In row beh ind .

M an—Bxo u ss b m , b u t 'w « esn ’k , h e ar s w ord .

'^ ^ tkst lve Onch—O h , and Is I t an y h usB iM s o f yo u rs w h a t Tm te llin g m y w ife ?

h as it s d raw -

S o bs M b s S a llySunsh ine S a lly Mngs sere n e ly , saa g s

Sso e t r s n i ^ sw e e t.

Itsrt ln g s w in iy a_ -------» sw eep ing sw aU aw s,» U «» f« tro s t .

s u n abs’a sin g in g , s o f t ly sin g tag , sw e e test aersnsd ea .

Spread ing sim p le s tra in s iisd a te ly sU rr in g som ber shad es.

I.e n d in g m oney bsi^ ks! ’ >

BU I— W h at sh o u t th e d eU sr owe m e? i

To m —I t ’s yo u r b irth d ay on F H -1 d ay . r u b rin g , i t to jrou w ith m y [ o ongrstu IsU o na .

B in —Yo u Ju s t b rin g the m oney! sa d r u e o a g ra tu lste m jm e lf.

F sU e n t—-D oetor, chan c es?

D o c to r—O h , p re tt wou ldn ’ t s t a r t read usd s to rie s .

how my

good, b u t 11 [ a n y c o atln -

Th e lum inescence o f Um Are-1 B o s t ^ g i ^ S s S ^ 'S e S S S I ’ .lm W to w l " y *• " c b v ^ P - t " o f sU h n ^

w L r b V w n Bm W liig fo rm s o f lig h t , b u t m an does a d t |S a lly « m t ^ t s ia t lm e n tsL s in g s

so sw e e t lv s t i l l .Som show a s l ly ssem s aa sp len d id , I

M b er, s t e s d fa ^ stro n g ..S le n d e r sym p a th e t ic S a lly , s ln g b ig

so u lfu l song .

H e had d ined v e ry w e ll and w as I - do ing b is b ast to f i t h ia k e y la to the4 !2S7,’ * » g m e a n - .

w h U ^ A f t e r a U rns s head looked the w indow above .

S» U p s ta irs—Go sw a y , • you I ['Y o u 're try in g to g e t In to the ng houae.

t , Be lo w —F o o l y o u rse lf, you ’re^ lo ok ing out o f the w ro n g w indow .

ST O RIES IN ST A M PS

’ O ur trie d and proyed fo rm o f gov �ernm ent Isn ’ t go ing to be d iscard edbecause some o f Its m ach in ery la 1 out o f o rd er. Yo u don’t Ju n k s n su -

� tomobtle Ju s t because th e esrb ure t- " 6r f a i ls to w o rk ; you proceed to sd -

lu st the c arb u re to r.

Frie n d —I s yo u r W ife ehsngasM e , o ld m an? �� ^

M a n - rv e n ever trie d —b u t 11 sh o u ld n 't th in k so l

Soaniords Ki l led Ri za lM )o r______________To Save Phi l ippinesp O X X Y -T W O y s s rs a f t e r h r ll*

Uant vntm* Ja m R i » t

r e a d i t o r N O T—B sn jsm ln F ra n k lin , tha f irs t p ost-1

m sste r-g e n srs l. h as 81 p ost o fflosa nsm ad fo r h im —thre e m ore »»ia« | George W ash in g to n .

l ls a t young / a m R lz s l w ss M o u t to d is as s rsb e l ag a in st theS p s n id i s u t t ie r lt iss to th s P h ilip - p in ts , th s is la n d s a r t t r ^ g th a ir w in g s o f -freedom u n d er th s p ro - v ls lo n t o f s b ill passed bar th s

to 1884.U n i M Sta tes Congrtos

F a th e r—S a y . i t ’s t o’e le e k .you th in k yo u <mn s ta y a i l n ig h t 7~

r—i n -

A m eric an reco g n itio n o t P h ilip , p in s todepradenee is p ro v id s d to

S u it o r . home f ir s t

have to

I f tbe men exp e c t to keep sheed o f the women tb e ya i have to so b ack to w h isk e rs . ,

Yo u n g F a th e r— In yo ur serm on] th is m orn ing you ^ toks ab out s | baby b e ing s new w ave oh th e o ossn I o f U fa . '

M in is t e r—^ Ihst's r ig h t Yo u n g F a th e r—Don ’ t you th in y «

fre sh sq u a ll wou ld have been n earer the tru th ?

th is M il a ft e r a 10- jr«a r tra n s i- t io o s l com m onwea lth g overn �m e n t Th u s R ix a l’s lo ng stru g g le fo r h is peop le ’s e ve n tua l lib e rty is p o intin g to w ard an end , and F ilip in o s see a t la s t th a t i t w as not in v a in .

o f the Yo ung FU lp to e P a rty , R U a l w as shocked a t the c ru e lty o f th e S p a n IA g o vsm - m en t to the is la n d s, began an to -t ^ v a eam nsign ssim inst I t a ^ b e n n im e d fro m ed ucation in

O n ly tha g ra c e o f God so d a Sb er- .a l' dose a t horse sense c a f f p reven t a m an fro m becom ing spo iled b y s n j overdose o f p ro q je r ity .

Ju d g e ^ -Bu t th ia o ffic e r sa ys th a t w h ile you w ere to a drunken sta te you tr ie d to c lim b a . lam p p o st

D e fen d an t—Y s A I d id yo u r woi^ sh ip , but thro e crocodUes had been fo llo w in g me ab out s H n ig h t , sa d th ey w ere g e tt in g on m y n erves.

Som e peop le have found o ut th a t the m ore sc ien ce th ey u U lise , tbe b ig g er p ric e th ey p ay .

M adrid and G erm an y . H e f irs t tu in a d tha lig h t on a f f s l is la a n ove l p u b llshsd to 1188. K b la m e

T h e re e fte r he becamea fu g m vs .

L a te r , h o w ever, a t the r is k o i h is ow n l if e , he re tu m sd to the is la n d s, w as ban ished ag a in to M indanao . T h U tim e he founded

se cre t org an izatio n to c a rry on. A n u p ris in g w as p lo tted , but the governm ent learn e d o f i t prem a �tu re ly , arreste d and deported h un �dreds o f n a t ive s . R i a l h i ^ I i

Soon a f l e r k ^ t ^ If a lt e f f Sta tes won the UTendt to to e Sp an ish -A m erlc an tW sr R lz s l is shown here on a s M c la l com m em orative issued to 1933. one o f .th re e va lu e s .(CopFrisht. m i , NBA Servlee, tne.)

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS B, a i~ .fr I

> b u m a v b n TB B B N O V B Ik . H * # * . V A T « L Y , F B B C I C t * * /

W H Y N O T ?

LB A O N Q * 1 V4A T O A M C a B A N D

A M D *n f iA iN IN O R X t T B A U .

H A S iC iN Q A IC M PT m b B u s y ;

M A m a u s o n B R c v B r u j q G l i t M A L D , l ^ C H E S T E R . C O N N .. M O N D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 0 .1 9 3 8

Deep for Him

1£ you wor r y sb o t it w h a t peapte th in k o f you . I t m eans to s t you have m ore confidence to th e ir op ln-1 i 3n s th an yo u h ave to yo ur o w n .

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES• e r f .B O O K * - TH PM M * Y o a * u a t « c R H I O U T 0 9 A 5 M H

W1 U ..V O OCEW TA ttoLVtO lULO EO

B E S C U t M a

• A M « o H A M y

ARO U M O O N IB MAVb, IM A L L W L W E

Toonen^Ue Folks

.V O O t h E T K * H IA O H A to 0 9 T K 9

C O L L E G E\ * v h r o b b i &hA B O U T V O U * . A R E to ’ T " y o u ' A * U A H E O ? ^

M E .O O O T E ’ T K W■------- tVJlVW E L L ,! O O Vt . W M OV3 VMMAT T O

TH IKJW .

By Fontaine Fox

U M O EBBTA M O

By MARTIN

V

1 2

y

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

<s>

S O M D U 'm i S T 1L .L W A R M I N O i i h *

S A M E O U D O F F I C E W B « n S , B H ?

'Y O U 'I .Lh a t c h A M y .

E G O S S T Y T I W e i O M A a w I V B U ,

S T O O L / V V H V P C X l 'T Y O U B IR D S T B V 9 C R A T C M lK b 3

IM B O M B o t h e r P A S T U R B ?

B V T H ' F R A V a o E P O S S O M V O U R V B S T I T L O O K S U K S i t 5s w a d

A X . O T O F W B A jq A M D T B A R L E A W - ' I M a A (3 A l M S r

F R E B L U M O Hc o a u r B R s / ' L o a r

A M O L D O t A Z I l L 6 M i y o u , G A K B /

1 w o m c B v o u v b " '(S O T - rH ' d O C P

T R l M A I W f lS O M X 3U R T U S l d S / S O .y o u C A M 'T B B t X X lB t

“T9 B S D R O C K w w * . X C O U L D U S B A A II b t E T A L L M B t lT O M

'IR B S GT H A T * n '4____________ _W O R T H O F B U T T B R V O U C H U R M B D A 1C

B O R O k l H O U R t - A S T S T O P *

FIM A t o vwu i i i F»e)

SCX)RCHY SMITH

_ ftbaceoiNUNO^ J^ :3 * ^ * * * f iT O R M ,

5 c o a e H y f iA F f iL v M AICe5 A P t R iL O O i

N ie H T LA N M N *M M r X K O -

N e X T M ORN IN G H fi M N P» T H $ PLA N K SU M O U N O e O 0 V

A R M C P M K N *

T h C • P 0 K e 5 MAN H M J U S r O E D C K EP

Y w e B L f t r v o u rO P T H E P t A N E -

• I4M TW A. r. u I,.

WASHINGTON TlfBBS

A LL T H R C E O F U5 - ? /

Ace in the Hole

you Keep HiooeO U T - v o i_________‘i xe B U N 9 A R K - .

J ^ 0 0 T - - T p 0 'l O 4O W

B U T . B U T > W H A t 5 H A U

By JOHN C TERRYWHfifT'LL MOO CO?/ JUST ,

p R i t x ' t N e p t i t s r O N * o f 'I n k s b I B A 6 IK 5 T H A T ‘T R IS 5 T O * * r ' num Mf fTN U5 - / /

By Pane

i Jk. - -i •

.R O S f iV .,

T w e B i ’5 w m s T r » " « * I f itT OUTA r^TO \M0** V ABOUT—

Wf S LOST Htfi m ____amorsT H U iT ,mu?

OUT OUR WAY

T *

U

Q

By William*w o , B U T y o u

K W O K / M B W E L L EK IO U O H T E R

KM O W D A T A H W O U LD M ’ O O T E R A L L D » T R O U B L E T E R R E A D B

A H O O U t D R E A D

s

-J

■S?iSf«TSi,S?lS2? • ) *” •“ 1 AMW JaSHS*

^ ------------ - ---- — f f v lT H T O P fiVTU ffu

f

TH ’ T O fSV T U ffW . L E T * E A T .

I W O N T EVBN G « T J t o B * e

’ l O U y s u r n t r ! W l t w P IA Y I N * F O R A O A N C B a t t m b o l d a o o b b i k A

r o o m r

ALLEY OOP

1 ^ 1

lU lM G S H A L . C O M * l b A / P W T Y n * B B .

W H e W A P B A O Wc a m t f iv i N s e e H is o t t L w r i H o u rH A V IW B “l b L O O K

O V ER B O M * O N C S H O O L O e # /

y jC L L . F O O Z V — P O IN T O UT T H ‘ D IN O SA U R " *' ,V 0 U V y A f g F O R A S T E E D .' 9 € ’ VE O O rT O

H O RRV ’C A U SE T H EV ’Us c a t t e r , c o m e

He Refuses to See His Doom'A ^ A W O V 'B R B O A R O *

•m w d - b x o w mf X P E R — 4

.4F

L n Me. o . a, M f .OP*. 3*1* *v NiA ieavtce. i t0 » 0

'’''AREMf/MOW, SEE THAT ONE OVER I KNEW ALL TH TIME l y h i t u t d c . . uirru vu*T if TIME YOU DION T KNOW ANYTHING

.CRITTERS!

By HAMLINT M ERE - W ITH TH* B U M P O N _ _

A W W .TH ERE / W » / , T H W S ' a ( CERA T0 SA U R U S .7

lO O P -

N EV ER M IHO TH A R G U M E N TS .*I KN O W WMAT I N O O lN '/ / -----H A N G O N / H E R E ’S TH A T ’SW H ERE V O U s e e / W HERE VO O ’REs SUM PIN.......... / WRONG. BECAUSE

' 'GHT n o w I'M

E V ESj

J : }

ii? ;.

Page 7: RUSSIANS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH FOR 'LIES' ABOUT AIR ...

k

Th» SUiday Group of H(« Wm - ligraa Otitld win lOMt tontorrow «ve> aliqr At tb* clrarch pMlon of the South hicthotfiet' church at S o’dodc. Un. Stuart Waaley and ICn. BWett RemiMy wtll be the

Ifemortal Temple. Pythian Bla- tart, will meet tomorrow night In Odd Fallowa hall. .Members who have tickets for the $S for the ses-sion ot the Grand Temple at Wa> terbury next week should be return* od at this meeting.

Troop'S. Girl Scouts wtll hold Its regulsr meeting at 6:30 tonight.

Ooloaal Joseph Atkinson of Ar- hnctoD, Mass., who is here on a

. Tislt with his sister, Mrs. Thomas Hopper and brother. IViUlam Atkin* spa of Center street, participated in the meetings of the Saleatlon Army yssterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Olamann of East Middle Turnpike and a party of friends enjoyed a trip through the Berkshires yesterday, returning by" way of Jacob’s Ladder. They found many detours due to the September floods, also that the Mo-hawk Trail'route is closed because of hurricane damage and It. la not expected It will,, be open to motor- IsU this fall.

A ameting of the permanent Ar-mistice Day committee will take plaes this evening at 8 o’clock in the Army and Navy clubhouse.

The Mancbester Girl Scout Coun-cil wlB mast tomorrow afternoon at 8 o’cloefc at the Y. M. C A. Miss PTanoea E. Dodds of the national orgaoixadoa’a Held staff, who la spending t«ro months with the Girl Soout troops and leaders in Man- chaster, wul be present and tell of her proipess and plans for the com-ing weeks.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Blssell House and Mr, and Mrs. Charles Starer Hous ' have Issued invita-tions for an “At Home" for Friday evening, October 21, from 7:30 to 9, at 201 East Center street.

’The Memorial Hospital augiUu^ will conduct Its annual fan rummage sals on'Thursday of this week at 908 Main street. Members and Mends art requested to deliver ar' tlclco to the store Wednesday after-

I f unable to do to they should eeataet the fouowlng group lead

S.V”era who will aee that eontrtbuUoni are called for: Mrs. James Shearer, dial 8638; Mn. Paul Fftrta. 6800; Mrs. Bdna Case Parker. 7838, Mrs. WUham KHcfdda 7863. The sale win ^)sa at 0:80 a. m. and continue throughout the day. Thursday.

Christopher Olsnney of Brookfleld street wUi Mww pictures and tsU of Ws trip through the Brltleh Isles andthe coronsUon during the summer of 1887, at the meeting of tho i^cn'e FMendahIp dub this evening at the South Methodist diurcb.

Tbs finaacs committee will meet this svMring St 7 o’clock at the North Methodist church, and the Chorob Coundl meeting will follow at 0 o'clocli. when three trustees will be elected.

lUv. K . ^ Brlekaon. pastor of tha BBisnusl Lutharsn cbureb. Is In New York City today to attend s meeting of the New England Con- f i rsaes flasnea oomailttss for Up- asla ODUega at East Orange, N. J.

laryTha regnlar raeatlng of the Auxll-

to the A.OJI. win be held thliavaaiag at 8 o'clock at the home of -Mrs. Mary Fltxpatilck, 11 South Mala street.

Tile Pormanent Armistice Day committee will meet tonight at 8 o’clock In the. Army and Navy Club.

Ever Ready Circle of King’sDaughters will meet tomorrow eve-ning at 7:48 In the directors’ room of the Whlton Memorial library. Mrs. E. P. Walton will lead the de-votions. The hostesses will besire. C. E. Wilson, Mrn. ScottSimon, Mrs. Arthur Se.vmour, Mrs. Mlnetta Legg and .Mrs. WalterLydall.

The annual meeting of St. Mar-garet’s Circle, Daughters of Isabelle will be held ’Tuesday evening in the Knights of Columbus home. At this meeting In addition to the rend- Ing of reports, a board of officers will be named. Following the meeting there la to be a social see- don.- the plans for this part of the evening's' program- being In charge of Mrs. May Holden and Mrs. Mar-garet Brannlck.

Recent appointments of the Board of ^lectroen to the various munici-pal boards and commissions Indicate that the policy of having a Select- ■fom on each of these boards, fol-lowed In the past. Is not to carry weight In the present. Former Se-lectman Mathias Spless, also form-erly a police commissioner, has been replacetl by a non-selectman. The present board feela that It con keep Its Anger on the pulse of events without necessarily playing the part of doctor, preoent action Indicates.

The local welfare department has reedved notice that the OCC la inneed of cooks and bakers, and aome of the vacancies may be flUed by expeiienced Manchester men between the agea of 38 and 45. ApplIeaUon should be made personally tomorrowat the state office building In Hart' ford. Wages arc the same as for other ratings ^ the corps.

Troop 8, Girl Soouta, wlU reaume meetings at the Highland Perk school. The new captain Is Mra. Sandra Prescott of -Bast Middle Turnpike, formerly of Springfield, who has had considerable training and experience in scouting.

HARVEST SUPPERWED„ OCT. 12, 6 P. M f .

SO. METHODIST CHURCH WILLING WORKERS

MENlTt* Corned beef, potatoes, tamlpo, carreta, breta, cabbage; rolls, tea or coffee; apple or aquash pie.Children under 12 Adulta...............

..........28e

..........40c

A R LT N E M. O A R R ITY

INSTRUCTORin

V o i c e a n d 'P i a n ostudio:

State Theater Ruilding Dial .1072

TUESDA Y M E A T SALEAt The

M anchester PubOc M arket4 Phones At Your Service — Dial 51.57 — We Deliver.

Boneleas Pot Roa.st Reef, lean, milid meal . . . . . . . , 29c lb.Rib Corned Beef, .nugar cured................... . . . . 12c lb.Veal CutletB, prime veal.......... .......... ___ 49c lb.

Chuck Beef (Ground.............................29c Ih.. 2 lbs. 5.5c

Lean Beef Cut Up for Stewing.................... , . . . 29e Ib.Small or I^rge Link Pure Pork Sau.sage___ .....5.5c Ib,

Fresh Cut Up Fowl, giK>d and meatv .. . ,. .. .. 69c eachFresh Tender Chickens for frying or roast ing .. 98c eachHpme Dressed Large Chickens for Roa.sting . ... ..5.’ic Ib.

AT OUR VEGETABLE DEPARTMENTCelery, well bleached.....................................9 bunchSoup ^n ch es ........................... .....................7 eachFancy Bartlett Table Pears............................ f. for 1 .icFancy Green String Beans.............................2 ql«. 19cBaldwin Cooking Apples .1........................... 5 |bs’ j 7cFancy Tokay or Seedless Grape.s.................... 2 lbs 17cFresh Green Peas.............. ......................... 2 qts. 19c

HOME M.\DE BAKERY COOD.SJelly Donnta wi|h Pure Jelly......... ............... 27c doz.Crullers, plain or sugared.......... ............... ’’ icdorButterfly Buns............................................ ] 2.1c doz!Try Onr Home Made, Delicious .Sc|ua.sh Pics___ 20c each'

OUTSTANDING TUESDAY GROCERY SAI.E

POTATOES, Native, Fancj-, Cook Nice and Mealy........ .............................. ..................15-lb. peck 25c

Ews, Loc^ Strictly Fresh. Good Size Medium, doz. 39c Armour s Vegetable Shortening. 1-lb. pkjr. ’» lbs •>5r^kporated Milk. Armour’s ..............i tail cans 2?cFree! 12c Package of Jean’s'Pie Crust with a Purchase

“ I?** for Ic . .'.’.’.'.'both' 25c" ........................ .. f 5e

Hmh.ey Bar*, Honey-Almond . . . . . . . . . . 2 Ige. bars 25c

lOU^^ CORNED BEEF. Fgmoos Flayoii 2 espa 35c

M.ancheatar mambars of tha Con-necticut Federation of Damosratle Women’s clubs are advised of a ztate-v/ide meeting, to be held. Oc-tober 13 at the Mohican hotal In New London. Governor Crx>aa, Col. Thnmai Hewee and Attorney Gen-eral McLaughlin are scheduled speakers. . R'eaervatlons may be | made by calUng Mrs. T. Edward ; Brosnan.

G IN I I IR L i n l& IC T B IC

R A N G ESCALROD UNITS

$99*5StiM JW.HAM COM

auiKtiiitai Corns

GeneratorsIf the ammeter poiiitei

swingB back and forth rapid ly or reinaiiiB at zero v hilt you are driving the genera-tor should be checked at once. We replace brushet 01 make repairs quickly l'h« cause of the trouble is elimi-nated and future expenst avoided.

NORTON .ELE<TKI( AL

INSTRUM ENT CO.Hilliard SL Phone 10«0

"A»'eCall For and Urilver Vour

Doctor’s HrescriptloatWEI.DON DRUG t’O. Prescription Pharmacists

903 Main Street

F A IT H E. S P IL L A N E

Announces the Opening of

B A L L R O O MC L A S S E S

High School Students:Tuc.s., Oct. 11 at Y:30 P. M.

Adults:Wed., Oct. 12 at 7:30 P. M.

Special {'(lunte will be given In the “Lambeth Walk" and the "Yam."

Studio:M STRONG STREET

Tel. 1891

HARVEST SUPPERWEDNESDAY, OCT. 12

3:30 -7:30COMMUNITY HOUSE NORTH COVE.NTRY

Au.vpicea Fragment Society. ’ .Mrnu:-tTholre of Ham or Corned Beof, nioahed potatoes, turnips, onions, M|uanh, ereamed rarrtits, creamed cauliflower, eahhage, pickled beets, cranberry Jelly, rolls, pie, coffee..Vdulfa, SOc. Children, S8c.

A n n o u n c e m e n tThe Regular Meeting

of the

Educational ClubWIH Be Held Wednesday.

October 12 At .1 P. M.At

Hollister Street School

a aRADIO

SERVICECunningham Tubes

Phone 4457

W m . Ea ICM hS.1 OelmoBt Stract

H A LE 'S SE L F SER V E A N D H E A L T H M A R K ET

MI."B Emily House and Mlos Mar- I >;aret RuswII will meet with the Brownie Pack at the Highland Park school tomorrow afternoon at 3:30.

T U E S D A Y S P E C IA L SDouble Green SUmps Given With Cash Sales.

OoMBIedal

rv- F lo urDerby

Corned Be e fHebis

24'/2-Lb. Bag 83 cCan 1 6 c

Q u a lity Soups cans 37c12 c a n s $ 1 .4 7 .

(Chicken Gumbo • Coneomme and Clam Chowder Bxeeyted.)_ I -------------

K ra f t Che ese 2-Lb. Box

No. 8 Can Mellow.'Elpo

PearsH ershey Syrup

2 Cans 21cLb. Can 9 c

Havol

B le ach ing W a ter(Conteate only.)

Ivory F la k es2 f e 3 9 c 2p*i?i l7eSu n k ist O rangesSu n k ist Lem onsC arro ts or Beets

H E A L T H M A R K ET R ib Lam b Cho ps u. 32 cLo in Lam b ChopsShou lder Lam b Chops

.... 29 cLam b StewPork ChopsBe e f StewH am burg or Sausage M eat

Free Delivery On All Orders for $1.00 or More.

Free Parking for Hale’s and House’s Customers In Rear of Store.

Th4 J W . l U L C CORkM a n c h i s t i r C o n h *

h _

O ctoberB A B YD A YS

at H ale*sCarter’s

Jiffon Shirts10% WOOL On la a Jiffy, no

buttons, no tapas to pull off. Sixes: Infants to 8 years.

69<Bands to natch...........50e

DIAPERSPinked edges, soft and abeorb-

ent No hema to hurt baby's ten-der skin. Size 30"x40’’.

$ 1 .9 8 dozen

Knit Nightgowns

• 1Tie strings to fasten at neck,

draw string at bottom of sleeves to prevent thumb sucking, and draw string at the bottom to protect the feeL Sizes: Infants to 2 yea-s.

Knit

G iven W ith Cosh So les A l l Day Tu esd ay In Both

Th ese Stores

The JW .IU L -C CORRM a M C M isn a C om e.

C fJ IO in c - 'S O M .IN C .

Get the Habit of Shopping On Tuesdays. Big Savings With Cash Purchases Through Double Green SUHps.

A D V ^ T IS E IN THE H E R A L D ^ IT P A Y S l'ilrrrdsafkisn' ‘ "in 'i i nim

BathrobesPastel colors or dark shades In

rose, blue or brown. Sizes: 8 montha to 8 years.

1.19 to $1.98

Snugrin Baby Cover Fasteners

C s e tKeep baby covered

•tnlgkt. 0 \ / '

High Chair Padswith detachable cover, easy to

launder. In blue, pink, green or maize nursery prints. $ 1 .2 5Wee-^Wee Seat or Toidey Seatste white or Ivory. With A « A A *• A O

or without footresL ^ 1 . 9 0 9 0 e H o

Deflectors................... .............. 59

Doable Green Stamps Given THth Caah • - Saks An Day Taeaday.

Legging Sets *.->t and A ha to ; blue

$ 2 . 9 8 t o

$ 4 .9 8

Sweater, leggings, hat mlttiuM. Sizes: 6 months 3 years. In aqua, cherry, and pink.

V »

CorduroyJackets

Zipper cloetng, warm-ly lined. Sizes: 3 to 8 years. Navy and brown.

^SnuggleDuckee”

The perfect crib cov-er. Baby cannot get un-covered. Zips down thefront. Plenty ofjsrm and leg room for Mbyto kick. Pink or Uue.

Knit RompmIn contrasting uriora. blue

and white, navy and m ai^ navy and copen. Sizes: fonts to I year. Snape bottom of paatlea.

$ 1 .1 9The B]iss Bih

The Mb that. completaly protects baby's clothee. Made of terry cloth la white, plak or blue. '<

29<BABY BLANKETS

Siae S$‘VKr Beacoa blaakete sm 4 ^ lajMtf»»iy petteras, with aateea V ■

Others i t ................. ... .11.75 and 12.00

Pure Silk and Wool Blankets I

$2.98 and $4.98

HEADQUARTERS FOR G. E. APPLIANCES.

Ample Free Parking Space for Hale’s and Hooae’s Costomen la Rear of Store.

J W H A L 4 CORKM M K H n r a i COMN.

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