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CASTO In J:;l;‘;:uo::’rglgd;:an MVIYJMNW the Siguature of M‘ cautious policy, refraining speculative investment. The President sald he did not be- lieve that the government's policy of retrenchment would result in any immediate lowering of prices with- out which economic recovery was difticult. ILLICIT STILLS T0 BE ABOLISHED NOW Janrez Probibition Men Plan to Help Enforce Law El Paso, Texas, Sept. 1.—Juarez prohibition officlals, following warn- Ings issued by physicians and peace officers to Americans here against drinking bootleg liquor, have taken a hand in an effort to abolish a number of alleged fllicit stills where the liquor is manufactured. Liquid resembling whisky, wines, NEW AIR RECORDS EXPEGTED IN RACE Prediction Made That 200 Miles an Hour Will Be Made Detroit, Mich., Sept. 1.—A speed of 200 miles an hour, the highest ever attained by man, will be recorded here during the Pulitizer air races, October 14, according to predictions made by army and navy officers who have made arrangements for the event, This speed, according to the au- thorities from Washington s 300 feet a second, or one-fourth the muzzle velocity of a .45 calibre bullet, one of the swiftest of projectiles. They added another comparison by saying the planes in this contest will fly abreast at a speed four times as great as the fastest average speed of any express train on the continent. The two branches of the govern- ment service have entered 23 planes in the Pulitzer race, bringing the total entry list to 28, The Pulitzer Trophy race, the cul- mination of a serfes of aerial con- tests extending over a period of sev- eral days will start from Selfredge from all VICTOR RECORDS For September Now on Sale Charming New Styles in Fall Hats EMBODYING LATEST PARIS AND NEW YORK IDEAS— (§ SATURDAY Swanee Bluebird The Sneak Dancing Fool Hot Lips Georgette Oogie Woogie Wawa Also A Wonderful List of Red Seal Records including a new one by PADEREWSKI heralding his return to the ‘concert stage after several fleld, near Mt. Clemens. The course years of retirement. is triangular and measures approxi- mately 40 miles. The Pulitzer race entrants must cover this course four beer, tequilla, (Mexican whisky) and other liquors in Juarez, have been found on this side to contain injur- fous elements, although it {s sealed as fancy feathers and silver cloth flowers. Large and medium Pokes, These Records will play on your machine - (.L.Pierce &Co. times without a stop. According to naval and army airmen the specially built planes now being made ready for the race should establish new records. Four air events in addition to the Pulitzer trophy competition are sched- uled for Detroit and vicinity during October., The first of these will be on Lakeé St. Clair, Saturday, October §(7. The chief event at the opening levent will be the Curtis Marine Fly- ing Trophy race, including only oter- Off-Face and Turbans, in Exceptional Values at Popular Prices black, red, brown, navy, Lyons velvet, erect pile or panne velvet and duvetyn are the favored materials. Trimmings are ribbon or velvet bows, jet ornaments, 1 .95 royal blue, ete. More Elaborate Hats of Beautiful Lyons Velvet These H finished with shir- ringse;end g}:a?;:gs,n;irrele b:glg asrtg-$6'50 $7.50 ; h f fi in soleil. Black is ‘%vlesaoturitds, 215 vrv}:llsztsmni(\)v?st col(?:s.$8'50 Snappy Felt Hats Largest assortment in town. genuine. Dealers in Juarez find a ready market for empty liquor bottles, and double price is pald when labels are not broken. Illicit manufacturers have several means of deceiving buyers. They get| a cheap grade of whisky and put it in bottles which contained expensive 5 brands. Water and tea frequently are 246 l\la“‘l St. used to dilute the liquor. Others burn . sugar, make tea from leaves of var- posite Monument water craft as entrants, The distance|l0US kinds and add a little alcohol. el B to be flown is about 160 miles, eight|Wine is treated with colored matter it W | times around a closed triangular [2nd artificlal flavors. course of 20 miles. Twelve fiylng| AR over supply of beer made in boats are entered. Jaurez, Chihuahua City, Monterrey Second Congress and Mexico City, offered to Jaurez The second national Aero conrpess saloons, has created another upheavel in Jaurez liquor circles. The whole- will be held here October 12, 13 and {14, Overland races will be held dur-|%ale price of beer has been slashed and retail prices reduced. ing the congress. Two of these races are set for October 12, They are The| One place s offering a lunch" with a five cent beer. ihas decided to carry out the electri- flcation of the Tokaido Railway be- tween Tokio and Odawara and the Yokosuka line during the current vear, Thirty-four electric locomo- tives to be used for passenger and freight service on these lines have already been ordered from America and England and some of these are WILL ELECTRIFY RAILWAY tically hand embroidered. Tokaido Lines Will ;;\'e New Im- provements—34 Electric Locomo- “free tives Will Be Installed. Tokio, for large capacity multimotored air- 1.—The Government |expected to arrive this year. Accord- |planes and the Aviatlon Country elub ’ |ing to present program the entire [of Detroit Trophy race for observa- { Tokaido line from Tokio to Kobe is|tion type (two passengers) planes will ‘Y!o be altered into electric system in|be held. Other aerial exhibitions and the course of five years but in view |contests will be held and in these the of a huge amount of expenditure re- |First U, 8. army pursuit group, sta- quired for the purpose it is thought [tiond at Seclfridge field, will play a probable that the change may be de- [large part. layed. It is also proposed to elec- The pursuit group, it has trify the Hachio-ji Kofu section of |known, is the nucleus for | the Central line during the next fiscal |vanced fighting air force of the Am- Sept. GEORGETTE Spectal Fox Trot Acolian Record 75¢ Grafonola Department | JOHN A. ANDREWS & CO. | 132 Main Street The craze of New York become the ad- Is Understood to Be Studying All Colors All Styles year. Pumps, Oxfords and Colonials for Women Talk About Reductions See These This Sale Has No Equal! Our grand final clearance sale of the season i1s now on in full blast in all of our stores all over the United States. Never have we offered such phenome- nal values and such tremendous as- sortments. Hundreds of pairs, and style after style that formerly sold for $3.60 to $4.50, including Oxfords; One Straps; Opera Pumps in patent leather and dull kid; Grey Suede and' Russia Colonials. You need only step up to our windows and look at our offerings army and is being enlarged rapidly. New machines are arriving each week and it has been learned the Detroit district is to be the army’'s aerlal headquarters, at least during summer months. The group some time ago was brought here from Texas. The day of the Pulitzer race will be a municipal holiday in Detroit. Prominent national figures, including President Harding, Secretary Hoover, Secretary Weeks and Secretary Den- by, the latter a Detroiter have been in- vited. The Aero congress s expected to bring together representatives of 60 American cities interested in creating a permanent national acronautic as- sociation to develop aviation both commercially and for national de- fense. " DEMAND FOR CAPITAL President of Japanese Bank Sees No erican Cause For Outburst of Optimism At Present Time. 1.-—President In- ouye of the Bank of Japan, despite the encouraging prospects for the raw silk trade still sces no cause for optimism respecting the general eco- nomic situation in Japan. Replying in an interview to the complaints that the Bank of Japan had not followed the Bank of England and the Federal Revenue Bank in lowering the bank rate, President Inouye said that while it was quite proper to lower the rates in American and England, where there had been no greit demand for capital during the general industrial depression, but where the business is now under readjustment in Japan the conditions were different. Here there was no lack of demand for cap- ital but the bankers were pursuing a Tokio, Sept. ol i i Nebraska Man Recovers From Illness | Situation of Policies Beirut, Syria, Sept. 1.—Mayor Gen- eral Charles V. F. Townshend, who commanded the British forces which surrendered to the Turks at Kut-el- Amara in the campaign for Bagdad, is at present here as the personal guest of General Gourand, the French High Commissioner of Syria. General Townshend, after the war, returned to England from Turkey and was elected to Parllament, where he has appeared as a critic of: the policy of the British government in the Near East. Special despatch from London in May said the government had refused him a passport to visit Turkey, fearing he purposed to de- liver pro-Turkish speeches. He was belleved strongly to favor the Turk- ish side of the argument with Greece. His Mission. It is believed in Beirut that Gen- :ral Townshend came to Syria in an effort to bring about a reconciliation of the British and French policies in Palestine and Syria. He has oeen quoted in a local newspaper as fol- lows: “The ment, Turkish Nationalist move- which had led to Mustapha Kemal Pasha gaining all the real power in Turkey, would never have issumed its present attitude of hos- til to the Allies had not the treaty of Sevres proposed to dismember the Turkish Empire.” He believes that the Greco-Turk. | ish war must be stopped, and (hat the Greeks should renounce thelr claims to any port of Asia Minor and| agree to the Turks retaining ethno- ologically Turkish parts of Thrace including the Moslem holy ecity of/ Adrianople. He suggests the Maritza river as the logical boundary in Thrace. “Cutting oft all Turkey's Arab provinces,’ 'asserts General Town- shend, “is quite sufficient punlshmenti for her having fought on the side of Germany. To leave Smyrna in the| hands of the Greeks i{s to create an Oriental Alsace Lorraine that must inevitably provoke another war." The defender of Kut-el-Amara ex- pects to spend about a month in Sy- ria. He will visit Cilicla, and there arrange for a conference with Must- apha Kamal Pasha. THANKFUL FOR HEALTH Sends $50 to Children's Home Out | of Gratitude. — Special For Saturday — $1.98 — $2.98 and up GERMANS PROGRESS IN STANDARD GAME Those Applied to Manufacturing ! Will Be World's Some Day New York, Sept. 1.— German standards—as the word is applied in | manufacturing and not in philosophy —will some day be the standards by which America will have to materials to most of the countries of the world, according to Oscar R. Wik- | American who returned engineer, from ander, has just where he Engineer Standard committee. “An example of standardization which @iermany has made since war time conditions be- gan,” says Mr. Wikander, the re- cent story of Russian an ufacturers built 700 locomotives for Russia, and every of them was interchapgeable others. Framng Gets Them. “Because of this standardization, every locomotive which was disabled furnish | Germany | represented the American the progress in | locomotives. | Nineteen German and one Swiss man. | part in every one | with | the corre§or&ng part in any of the | New Britain | became a store of spare parts for the [others of the same type. Standardi- | zation work is being forced by Ger- |mans because they want to introduce | their standards in the great import | countries and possibly in the entire | world. | “To this end the great German de- liveries in kind to France will, as far as possible, be made according to German standards, thus introducing them into that country. ‘“Standardization in Germany is the work of a huge committee, which | works in splendid co-operation with Saturday, Y. M. C. Goldenblum Millinery Co. 188 MAIN A. Bldg. the manufacturers. This committee —called the Normenausschuss'—is most interested in American stand- ardization and is very anxious to col- laborate with us in establishing inter- national standards. “England, too, is working to force the adoption of her standards on manufacturers in her colonies and dominions, and it is time for Ameri- ca to plan to meet the conditions which some day may force us to manufacture goods that will conform to the standards ‘made in Ger- many.’ " It MONEY Deposited in Our Savings Department Up to and Including September 2nd Answering Letters beccmes'a congenial matter when. ycu use the right kind of note paper like MMER WA O L Social Stationery oftering. Madevin cight fashionable envel- Other contributions received at the | ope sizes, with sheets to fit, in W 'irome today and vesterday include [:n T “L thrce finishes — linen, bond, [ three $5 checks and two $10 checks A MMERC' B A 2 “hicago, one check for $10 from | and ripple. Also supplied in con: from Chicago, or s61 TRUST CO. venient writing tablets in the sidilhde ‘:' i cavss ':;m s A and one for $5 from Oregon, a check WBRITAIN [ popular lsizes, with attractive for $15 from lansas, one for $5 from N Lvy Uag i Minnesota and one for $10 from i / B Lilinots. | Won't sou step in 1o see our BE These are busy days at the Home, offerings of tnr popular line? ) The boys are cutting, selling and| husking corn from the flelds and the | 1 66 Church Street for this sale to realize that it is the greatest bargain event in footwear for women that this city has known in years. By all means take advant: of it NOW, while the selection 15 a. its best. COME TOMORROW. See these wonderful shoes and re- member that EVERY PAIR IN THIS SALE IS A BARGAIN. Buy Mewark ShoeStores o Chain ot Shoe Stores in tae United States. So glad was a man in Weston, Ne- to recover after a siege of sickness that he sent a substantial| check to the Klingberg Children's/ Home in New Britain to show his gratitude. The man had been sick B for some time but gradually Sn- }prowd_ When he felt that he was entirely recovered, he wrote a check A |for $50 and sent it east as a thank Tomorrow Alright a mild, vegetable Tazative to tieve Constipatios and keep the digt ve_functions pormal. Draws Interest from the 1st The Lasgest R JUNIORS— Little Ns One-third the regu- lar dose. Made of me ingredients, then candy coated. Por children and adults. NEW BRITAIN STORE 324 Main Street, Near R. R. Crossing Open Saturday Evenmgs 6-8 Standard Time |girls are canning it. Some of the| {corn is sold to New Pritain people {who wish to buy, while a great deal lof it will be used in the home this winter, AD AewsoR Stares Open Satarda, .4 / cnnom!u."n‘l" te Accommecate MNoveck's Prescription Drug storcs.