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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1028 for Yale i that WOMAN TEACHES HOMELESS MEN T0 READ AND WRITE| woild bring ladies to the uni DINING GRL IS~ = AT YALE SOCUL Ula Sharon Attends Prom Despite . The 3 but in revising its prml- list of |-‘r‘om Nownely | hang Miss Ula Sharen" to ia 8 Robinen Many a Yale man sniffed when he was asked if it were really true that a e girl had never been to a Yale prom Huh Promenade mmittee had liscussed the ter, according to O'Hear and eertainly had not ab d to any propesed guest, The ws Was quite angry editorially neve Nomads Are Directors, Chicage, Peb. § Press)—- A throng of taught to write woman is the sented every (By Associated homeless men sentences by a lone unusual spectacie pre Monday evening at the Hoho college here, The college is di rected hy & cabinet of nomads eleeted by the men themselve The teacher is Mrs, Frances Dono van, a resident of Hyde Park and author of “The Weman Whe Wa A study of waitresses’ life and condi- tions, Mrs, Donovan seems to enjoy her task, and to command the inter- est of her pupils, Scarlet Vever Causes Tsolation of | Two of the most intorested pupils i b Towieton. ‘.mw Neotty,” a man M‘lnnld)r life, and his son, a ruddy, spectacled youth Peb, 6 Rates Col-in his teens. “Scotty™ has a bald under quarantine for | head, keen eyes, and shoos spattered scarlet in the midst of mid-|with mortar-——~for he is an itinerant oxaminations, was still tsolated | bricklayer as well as a street speaker. Bight en of searlet fever | His speech is weighted with imposing students been reported, | Latin derivatives and seasoned with Dum city health of- an occasional homely Scottish phrase, issued the quarantine redolent of the heather. Saturday, examined stu-| "I have my own lesson,” he told a with the assistance visitor "1 take such words as fruits o physiclan, No spread | and cereals, write synonyms and met. liscase was indicatea |aphors for them, and then compose In addition to scarlet fever a num- | eutty (short) sentences, caleulated to ber of students are reported suffer.| make people think.' from a mild form of influenza. One of the few nomads who has re- Roland ¥, Doane was taken | mained in attendance since the col wiston hospital yeste | lege opened last autumn Is a gaunt, said he had pneumont | bearded dreamer. *T am one of your - milleniumites,” he avows, figurately. “I like the philosophy of the dough- nut: the bigger the doughnut, the | bigger the hole.” A stage has been equipped with odds and ends gathered by the pupils lhul:vpnrl. Feb, 6.—Five members|and plays were produced at the col- the Shaw family of this city were[lege until the director felt the pangs stricken with ptomaine poisoning last | of starvation un:] went to work. night and were taken to the Bridge- port hospital where it was said they would all recover. The only member | of the family who escaped was a| two months old baby, which had not | | eaten any of the meat which is he. | “nce of five hundred thousand francs [ieved to have caused the poisoning. | (rom the safe in the paris office of ward Shaw, the father and his| the American Lxpress ( 0. is reported wife, Helen, were found unconscious|bY 1 Matin today., No clue as to [in the kitchen of their home, while | the Whereabouts of the money has as two daughters, Helen, 7, and, Mar- | Y€t been found. garet, 8, were found ill in bed. Ed-| i AR AR nothing whatey about the whole|ward, 10, was stricken in a moving fresh egEs 5lc dozen, matter until it blared ferth in the| picture theater he had visited Swith | Russeil Bros.—advt, newspaper of a nearby Connecticut|a triend, { city. New Have 6T really no rease Ula premier Cires Village V¢ tle dark only seventes attended Yale Nhare nwich 1it 1anse seemed (0 he the consensus been floks of ‘em-—only no ed to | abput them till | over hut th arguing. You tell o stage girl just by you know," one happs Ar it w can't ooking th \ AS @ menade here last evening Not only was she icott Cullom, Yale n her for always at her AT EPIDEMK COLLEGE, year today among Dr fleer. order dents | f the Had to Vindicate Self f the my m , Mrs Ka (U'la irname for stage om the Shubert 10 train for New n't arrive at the Uni- the promen- join the w Charlie hero, and Edwin t the Prom Commit- a few The | r week party never six in the morning. MEAT POISO! sas City Bridgeport rpo Effects of Ptomaine, Theat Have versity dining whe ade was held in time to 500,000 FIIANCS MISSING, Paris, Feb, 4 (By the Associated Press)—The mysterious disappear- hours? annoyed Yale so a that publicity she so * a delics President A somewhat ruffled, and Dean Fred erick Jones, quite complacent, knew | questior or Strictly 2 dozen $1.00, PADDOCK TO RUN. L.os Angeles, Feb, 6.—Charles W. Paddock, world’s champion sprinter, is one of six University of Southern California runners to enter in the open relays at Franklin field, Pennsyl- vania, April and 28, according te Coach Dean 1t's Happened Before Fresh eggs 51c dozen. Russell Tros. | Certainly the university had taken |—advt. ! Sleighing Parties Taken Out THEPZ MAGUIRE CO. 102 LINWOOD STRE U. OF M. IS E Ann Arbor, Mich,, I"eb, 6.—A pro- test to the federal prohibition en-| forcement director at Detroit against announced plans to send two opera- }h\r‘& to the University of Michigan ; *J hop” Friday evening was in pros- | pect today. Faculty and students alike | were stirred by the report that liquor agents planned 'to mingle with the| guests at the university's leading social event and the impu ion that the| dry laws might be infringed. The order ‘“bordered on to an in- sult to the 700 young men and their guests and the members of the faculty who are to attend” in the opinion of Dr. Joseph Bursley, dean of men. | Other members of the faculty ex- pressed themselves in a similar vein, PHONE 2057-4 \ ELL LO( ALSO ¥ l\L RESIDENCE ON WEST M \l\ A\I) S\IALL Ill'\l\] SS IN CENTER OF THE CITY. H. D. HUMPHREY 272 MAIN ST.—ROOM 208 NATIONAL BANK BLDG, Volz Floral Co. 92 W. Main St. “Se7 !t with Flowers” Tel. 1116 2 Pure lard 2 1bs. 25c. Russell Bros. —advt. R T R THE MOHICAN MARKET SPECIAL FROM 9 A, M. TO 12:30 P. M. ROUND — SIRLOIN — PORTERHOUSE STEAK-Well Trimmed. .Lb. Fresh Cut Hamburg. .3 Lbs. 25c M SPECIAL FROM 9 TO 11 A, M. Best No. 1 Potatoes. ..Pk. 23c ALL MORNING SPECIAL—7 TO 12:30 Gran. Sugar ......10 Lbs. 72¢ (\\ ith ()th(‘r Grocery Purchases) M 3 TO 5 l’ BONELESS ROLLED— SHOULDERS ......... Lb 19¢ SPECIALS— Fresh Shoulders vovoo Lb. 14c “FROM 3 TO 5 P, LEAN SMOKE SHOULDERS ....... Lb.. 121/zc Fresh Pork Loins .. . .. {\\'HOIJ-T OR HALF Lb. 18¢c | "DER JUICY CHUC K(l\\l\ N PRIME RUMP ROASTS BEE . MEATY POT ROASTS . H SPARERIBS FRESH PORK CHOPS FANCY LAMB CHOPS Bakery sp;ciai! THE BIST Lb. V_s_.cA— BREAD .. | BEST CREAMERY Butter ‘J WHIPPED CREAM PUFFS ach 25C Fach 5c NUT Margarme L GEM STRAWBERRY 53¢ b, Lh. 5 & e | OUR DINNER BLEND COF OOLONG OR FRESHLY BA PEARL BARIL MOHICAN EV. PORATED \lllk EXTRA FANCY SWT. POTATOES. ... 7 Lbs. 25¢ 3::.'\!"?:‘{; 4 bs, 25¢ FRESH GREEN = OB w. 60¢ FINE SATU Lbs, 2 Lbs. .2 Cans 21¢ EXTRA HEAVY GRAPEFRUIT. . 4 for l5c BLOOD RED NATIVE 10 (4 BE l Lbs. sc 10¢ 13¢ l Y TANGERINES. . ), LARGE WHITE (‘ARRO’!‘\ ... Bunch CAULIFLOWER FRESH NATIVE CARROTS CURLY KALE. . LARGE FRESH MU Hobo College Conducted by \lnl Prances Donovan Every Monday= | INSIST GERMANY 1S NflTTlllIAPITUMTE! | Thyssen Industrial Leaders Seek {0 Prove French Are Lost Hamborn, Germany, Feb, 6. (By Associated Press)—Bixty-six thousand workmen employed In the various | Thysse: nts at Hambern, Muels | heim, Duishurg and Dinslaken are working full time—three eight hour #hifts a day—and have not been af- feeted either by the railroad strike or lack of fuel, Energetic At 81, August Thyssen, the venerable founder of the famous steel dynasty, is an Indefatigable worker, He is §1 years old, but is at his desk regularly, at & in the morning, frequently re. maining there until 11 at night, Locomotives are busy shunting cars in the immense railroad yard of the plants ich cover about ten square miles, hey are built around seven pitheads and are thus provided each day with sufficlent coal to supply the lentire works with motive p v, Alded By France, “The French oecupation has not in. terfered with us" is the opinion ex« pressed at the Thyssen plants, “As a matter of fact, it has helped us. We were having a lot of trouble with the '(‘omnnmm element among our work- ers but the French occupation and the arrest of ¥ritz Thyssen lined them up solidly behind us” Many industries in t¥ Ruhr are in a similar situation mining their own conl within a few hundred yards of the works, The railroadmen have remained faithful to their jobs and the plants are well stocked 'with raw material, Thus they can hold out for many months, No Hope For French, | “The French may be able to oc- |enpy the Ruhr militarily but they will never get anything worth while out of i, saia one of the Thyssen directors. “Our workment are satisfied, We rals- ed their salaries 90 per cent on Feb- ruary 1 and they now draw 1,25 marks an hour or 10,000 marks for an cight hour day. We shall raise their wages again should the cost of living increase, “We are doing everything we can to provide food as cheaply as possi- ble. There are now 80 carloads of foodstuffs from the interior of Ger- many at the Oberhausen yards. The shipment has been delayed on ac- count of the strike but we are bring- ing it here in lorries to distribute among the workmen at cost. Fats, whigh are especially scarce in the Ruhr, will be provided at the rate of a pound and a half monthly for every member of each employe's household. No Famine Fears “Our worker shave received pledges of food from Holland and America which will be forthcoming should a famine occur.” The management of the Thyssen in- terests assert that the French state- ment to the cffect that the huge profits made during the war were de- posited in foreign countries is er- roneous, All available funds, it is said, were used to buy raw material with a view to the emergency of the probable occupation. It is declared that August Thyssen found it very difficult to get sufficient funds from the bhanks to meet payments daur December 1 last. As the correspondent motored through Duisburg, Ruhrort, Hamborn, Oberhausen and Muelheim he- noted that most of the steel plants and mines were working but that the rail- road vards were all idle except for a few traing manned vy the French. However, the trainmen were at work in the private yards and plants. Navigation is at a complete stand- still. At Ruhrort the correspondent saw two tugs flying the Dutch flog and one with the Irench emblem houling two coal barges up the Rhine toward Alsace. The river was practically deserted. The industrial magnates have not lost courage. ‘‘We can hold out as long as the French can” sems to be the concensus. Galbraith & Pattison Carpenters and Joiners Hardwood Floors and Paneled Ceilings a specialty. Tel. 1493-4 Repairs A.D. Clifford ~— BUILDER — 44 Hawley Street ESTIMATES FURNISHED Jobbing Promptly Attended to Tel. 2891. that is also a food. It milk &t its full creamed best and we is PARK STRLET, & PHONE 1720 % HARTFORD 'l'ob.hu Orders Taken As Early As 8 A, M, HARTFORD 10% to'50% Reductions in 3 piece overstuffed suite, chair and wing chair, $175 Sale price ...... in damask., Former pncc $300. Sale price ..... Value $200. Sale price ..........0s 3 piece cane suite, cushions covered in two tone velour. $350, Former price 1 3-piece cane suite, cushion seats covered q piece overstuffed suxtc. covered in tapes- try; davenport, arm chair and wing chair, SRl PrIce o oo vt s ses s The February Sale of Furniture Eighth Floor Liberal Arrangements May Be Made As To Deferred Payment Living Room Furniture 3 piece overstuffed suite, consisting of davenport, chair and wing chair, covered in tapestry, All large pieces. Regular price $300, Sale price 0239 3 piece cane suite, covered with two-toned velour, Former price $425. Sale price ............ $225 3 piece overstuffed suite; davenport, chair and rocker, covered in mohair velour. $175 [sitwe ... $400 Easy Payment Terms davenport, arm $129 $150 $169 | Dining Room Furniture 10-piece dining room suite, heppelwhite period antique mahogany finish ; 66-inch buf- fet, oblong table, partly enclosed china, en- closed server, 5 chairs, 1 arm chair, uphol- stered in high grade tapestry. price $375. Sale price 10-piece mahogany Put in a Herald Classified ad, it will | help you sell it Have Your Eyes Then yow'll know yo ing them fairly. Even though you hought glasses two years ago you should ascertain if the now need different lenses, us help you. Frank E. Goodwin Ey lgll( Specialist TEL. 1905 CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-13 Estimates cheerfully given on all )ol-‘ THE OLD HOME TOWN Queen Anne dining | room suite, 66-inch buffet, china closet, ob- long table, enclosed server, 5 chairs, 1 arm chair, upholstered in tapestry. Regular price $375. Sale price 10 piece dining room suite in William and Mary period, finished in dusty walnut, con- sisting of buffet, oblong table, china closet, enclosed server, 5 chairs, 1 arm chair, up- holstered in blue figured tapestlv Regular price $450. Sale'price $350 10 piece solid mahogany dining room suite, buffet, china closet, oblong table, enclosed server, 5 chairs, 1 arm chair, upholstered in blue hair cloth. Regular price $635. Sale price ...... Regular . $315 $300 Easy Payment Terms One family house on Dwight street with small cash at a big bargain. You can afford to buy it lon speculation Lot is 50x150 feet deep. Good lo- | |cation right on the trolley line. We’ve only a few days to sell this house and then it will be GONE. | CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. | | 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg, mm OYSTERS —DRINK — LAMS | ' crapwmar AYERS' SODA WATER SHRIMP i'-lx'?dgl-‘-:el?—gmmhmg you will like— SCALLOPS LOBSTERS HONISS’S 24-30 STATE ST. HARTFORD Three size bottles—3c, 10c, 15¢.” | | | COLD WEATHER NEEDS | We have a rull line of new and second-hand stoves, oil heaters, gas lieaters, cte, A. LIPMAN % New and Sccondhand Pnrnlmre." 24 Lafayette St. Tel. 1529.2 BY STANLEY: *WERM DOOLITTLE, CHAMPEEN WHITTLER OF N THE NORTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET, SPRAINED HIS WRIST WHILE CARVING A FANCY LETTER. ‘H/,0N_THE CRACKER BARREL /N BAXTERS CASH STore