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/ DAILY FASHION SERVICE Finishing an Opening withan Underlap The finishing of an opening with an underlap is more than ever an im- portant detail of sewing since so many frgeks now fasten on one shoul- der, This shoulder-closing must be carefully and neatly done unless the¢ effect of the dress is to be marred. Putting the right sides of the ma- terial together; sew a strip of cloth two inches wide to one edge of the opening to form the underlapping piece and a strip one and one-half | inches wide to the other edge of the opening to face the top piece. This is shown in Figure 1. Then turn the facing to the wrong side and sew into position. . Turn the other .edge of the underlap strip in and stitch. Then turn the strip to the wrong side of the garmént and fold through the center with the two rows of stitching meeting. This is shown in Figure 2. Sew snaps through the underlap to hold it in position. igure 3: this is the finishing used for shoulder or underarm openings and plackets. The frock sketched is a new model of crepe-back satin which is having another wave of popularity and is ex- pected to be very fashignable this fall and winter. MARCINO ORDERED OUT OF MEXICO Did Not Return to U, §. of His Own Free Will Mexico City, Aug. 30.—Joseph Biata alias Joseph Marcino who is how in jail in Laredo charged with the per- petration of bank frauds in Chicago and Warren, Mass,, did not surrender | to: American officers because he had | been the vietim of extortion here but was expelled as a pernicious foreigner, the Mexico City police said-today. §When Biata was taken into cus-! tody at Laredo he asserted that Mexi- can officials, supported by . certain | American financial interests had made it ‘impossible for him to continue in business in the capital and that he had finally surrendered. The police, hawever, told a different story. They sajd Biata's departure was the result of & varied business career here in the course of which he fraudulently cHanged from American to Mexican citizenship. I Arriving in Mexico City early this year the police said Biata, alias Bat- tiano and Marcino assumed the name of Vincenzo Traducio, asserting that he came from a noble Italian family. LYCEUM Now Playing “THE 4TH MUSKETEER” With Johnnie Walker A RIP-ROARING COMEDY- DRAMA SUN,, MON., TUES “THE 11TH HOUR” A ¥OX SUPER PROD. Parsons Theater HARTFORD - 'Phone 2-0635 3 Nights Beginning MONDAY, SEPT. 3 Matinee: (Labor Day) Monday and Wednesday GEOM GATTS presents Ausrica’s Leaome IRusw Ac PRICES: Evenings—50c to $2.00. Mat., 50c to §$1.50 OFFICE, Prices: Mon. and Wed. SEATS NOW AT BOX He disappeared, the officials recalled, when the Italian counsil exposed him but re-appeared shortly afterward with Mexican citizenship papers and under the name of Pablo Gomez ob- tained control of an' alcohol. factory. He ran afoul of the internal revenue department when accused of stamp frauds amounting to 200,000 pesosy the police declared, and this resulted in an embargo on his factory and his expulsion from the country. DENY CENSORSHIP NOW Cuban Government Announces That Cable Messape to nml.ll‘mm‘ u. s Won't be Probed. New York, Aug. 30.—Cablegrams passing through the Cuban offices of the Commercial Cable Co. will not be subject to censorship by the Cuban government, according to a message received at the company's New York offices late last night. It was report- ed yesterday that all cablegrams pass- ing through Cuba would be subjected to government scrutiny. “The measure should not be considered as censorship,” the message stated, *’but merely as obser- vation limited to messages of politi- cal significance. Commercial messages, code or otherwise will not be inter- fered with. present OPENING TONIGHT —0— Doors open at 7 p. m. Performance starts at 7:45 Tonight—Friday—Saturday THE DRAMATIC SENSATION The Prize Winner! CHAINS . Everybody is raving about it! VAUDEVILLE Featuring DOTSON Vaudeville's Lightning Stepper See Him Sure— Better Than Ever MABEL HARPER & CO. MAX ARNOLD & CO. ALLEN. MARTIN AND MAY Next Week— “IDEAL” Champion Lady Swimmer and Diver of the World, performing in a tank holding 8,000 gallons of water. . “YOU CAN'T FOOL YOUR WIre" o BRrrAIfi DAILY HERALD 'filURSDAY, HIGHWAY REPAIRS WILL COST MILLION at once with ‘ e tu . | Cook Aveue i Plainile Among der. Keeps the skin cool, dry and soft, and allays | Roads to Be Reconstructed irritations, inflammations, itchings and burnings, Your baby deserves the_ best—Johnson’s. Used on more babies than any other Hartford, Aug. 30.—Contracts to-| taling close to $1,000,000, and involv- | ing the construction of more than 23| miles of road, in addition to a can-} crete bridge, were awarded yesterday | by the state highway commissioner. | The total cost of the work will be/ $968,000, of which $159,280 in cement will be furnished by the state, Ten contracts, in all, were award- ed, the outstanding improvement be- ing the construction of a new high- | tween these two places hy‘upproxi- mately 12 miles, This improvement begins at YOUR DRUGGIST 1S MORE THAN A MERCHANT the improved road at the Torflng(oni town line. thereby eliminating Try the Torrington, Drug Store First way of Thomaston or Winsted, as has been the case heretofore. It is an the traveling public. It ~will approximately $200,000. In the new construction on all 10| PRINGESS WILL BE BURIED IN N. YORK Anastasia’s Wish to Be Gmnmd: hy He]‘ sm‘yiviflg Relafives ibituminous macadam, to the A. Vito 8,700 feet of asphalt and a concrete | bridge at Collinsville. Contracts were awarded as follows: Town of New Hartford: {Company, Thomaston, for 129.30. Town ‘of Canton: Concrete bridge | to L. Suzio Construction company Meriden, for $17,060.50, plus ccment | to be furnished by state, | Town of Farmington: 3,700 lincar feet of shect asphalt on Farmington | trunk line, beginning at Birdseye's | corner and extending to Elm Tree Inn, to the Edward Balf company,| Hartford, for $80,003.50, plus cement to be furnished by state. Towns of Clinton and Madison: On shore road, 18,191 feet of plain and | reinforced concrete to Cpnnecticut National Pavements, Inc., of New Haven, for $159,955.80, plus cement furnished by state, Towns of Woodbury and Bethle- hem: Bethlehem-Woodbugy road, eight inch waterbound macadam, re- surfacing for 6,413 feet, to John DeMichiel & Brother, Torrington, for $24,015.75 Town of Kent: reinforced concrete By The Associated Press. London, Aug. 30.—The family of the late Princess Anastasia of Greece formerly Mrs. William B. Leeds who died shortly before midnight last night was making plans today to send the body to New York. Some of the members of the Greek royal family favored burial in Athens but it was held that the present political situa- tion there which has already resulted in the exile of Greck royalty includ- ing Prince ClLristopher, Anastaslas husband, would preclude this step. Was Her Last Wish, Morcover the princess herself be- she died expressed the wigh that she might rest with her father afd mother in the mausoleum, which she built in-Woodlawn cemetery, New York. Memorial services will be held in one of the Greek Orthodox churches in London before the Body is sent to the United States and prayers will be offered in the churches of Greece. Hundreds of messages of sympathy from relatives and friends in all parts of the world especially the United States, were received by Prince Christopher. Almost every royal house in Europe tendered {its condo- lences. Mrs. Henderson Green ' of Mont- clair, N. J., sister of the dead princess, who sailed from Naw York on Tues- day on the steamer Mauretania in an effort to reach the bedside, has been advised by wireless of Anastasia's passing. Up to the last the princess main- tained the stoutest hope that she would recover. Before her illness, took a hopeless turn she told the cor- respondent. Was Ever Hopeful. “I have been in the valley of the shadow before and a great spirit guided me out of the darkness. 1 see that light still burning and I am sure it will give guidance to my foot- steps once more.” But from the be- ginning her physician who knew the malignant nature of her malady— she suffered from cancer—held out no hope. There is much speculation to what extent Chridtopher will share in his wife's fortune. The princess herself always maintained that she had never settled a single dollar on the prince and that she was poweriess to change the terms of her previous husband's will, which tied up the entire Leeds fortune in a trust fund. However, it is thought by the friends who knew the deep affection existing between Anastasia and Christopher that the princess provided an ample sum to enable him to live comfortably, It is also thought that she may have made some arrangement for the support of the scattered members of the Greek royal family who now are not in affluence, 18,122 linear feet of on Housatonic German Potatoes Flood England, Prices Lowered London, Aug. 30.—Thousands of tons of German potatoes have been dumped on the English markets, causing a scrious loss to English growers. The dumping has forced the price of potatoes down to about $27.50 a ton, whereas the growers say | they are losing money unless they are able to get $30 a ton. The growers have formed an association and will attempt to have a bill passed by par- liament which would prohibit the im- | portation of potatoes when the home | market was in stable condition. ——— FRECKLES Don’t Hide Them With a Veil; Re. move Them With Othine— Double Strength This preparation for the treatment of freckles is usually so successful in removing freckles and giving a clear beautiful complexion that it is sold under guarantee to refund the money | of it fails. ' Don't hide your freckles under a veil; get an ounce of Othine and re- move them. Even the first few appii- cations should show a wonderful im- provement, some of the lighter freck- les vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength Othine;: it is this that is sold on the money-back guarantee, AUGUST 30, 1923 drink 1t cO CofF cr 1d when it’s ot Putnam saves the day Town of Mansfield: Town 13,200 improvement that will mean much to |¢réte on Putnam-Norwich road to . cost | Vito company, Thomaston, |714, plus cement furnished Town of Trumbull: contracts, there will be 14 miles of [Ténforced concrete on Nichols road® perefore that 1 plain and reinforced concrete, sm.m‘ro Bridgeport Construction company, | seng the observance of September 17 miles of bituminous macadam, more |Bridgeport, for $92,544, plus cement |5 Constitution Day, and 1 urge that | than a mile of waterbound macadam, ({0 P furnished by state. With the cost of the |ducted the total cost work, On the |awarded nouncement Chicago | vens. a former | Melton Augustu n('flurmu, in October, ot the in Constantinople. have been spreading of the evil, from amounts |bituminous macadam on the Depot-Storrs highway, Nepaug reservoir and connects with company, Thomaston, for $67,479.40. of Plainvilie: I'rom Hartford, motorists [feet of plain cohcrete on. Cook ave- will travel by way of Collinsville and nue, to the Osborn-Barnes company, the | Panbury, for $17,051, necessity of reaching Torrington by [furnished by state. Towns of Putnam linear feet of the value . of to a single day and s to A, 5,518 plus 19,250 cement of the $809,2 Nepaug Road, 28,282 linear feet of which is onc of the largest award. ever made in $18s,. [State highway department. all projects will begin at once. by way in New Hartford which will form [r0ad, to the' Osborn & Barnes com- a direct route from Hartford to Tor- pany, Danbury, for $135,252 plus ce- ington and reduce the distance be- ment furnished by state. il 10,450 feet of Mansfield Vito linear cement Killingly: reinforced con- de- the contraets the Work on | from words, McCormick to Wed English Young Woman in October London, Aug. W an Miss Ashley of Hastings. 30.—Formal of Par | band, the Hon. Ashley, |of Baron | the grand-daughter of the late Gen Strover, a former governor The marriage takes place Mrs. an- made today of the engagement of Allister McCormick of Miss Joan Tyndale Ste- Stevens is the daughter by marriage Charles | whose hus- is a brother Miss Stevens is BUBONIC PLAGUE A’\I;I‘I'IARS taken Constantinople, Aug. 20.—Two cases bubonic plague have occurred Strong measures to prevent SHOES FOR tin *can for $77.-|think that of all by state. land think. | feet of o | | Given Hearing Saturday. GOVCI‘DOI‘, ll] Mwsage, Ul‘ges A]l‘ In police court this morning Judge | with the theft of $50 from his | mother, Mrs. Christina Neumann, of Charles A. Templeton in a letter to| Mrs. Neumann testified that she | Frank B. Steele, secretary general of fhad saved a sum of money with | American Revolution, public | gne gaid that the money had been |today, urges upon all citizens the ob- placed in a bureau drawer and when Im‘(‘“,r“ Day. The governor says In his| b ©yi il testified that the youth ad- ctter: |and happiness as a nation lhan‘;‘:’“‘l"rlhl)’:“)l‘:“is'" town last week and obedience to law. And the founda- | Pinone by justice, was continued until tomor- “This document over a period of |1"°" o nearly 150 years has stood the test | FOW morning with bonds for release war. That it is \\']l‘(’)(ll\l"o:::ff:d(“:d o5 | sented the accused man, asked foF & |one will insist; Boy Who Is Alleged to Have Takem . . | Widowed Mother's Savings Will Be | | William C. Hungerford continued the | '.0 Obse”e Tms Date {case of Theodore Neumann, charged &6 Austin street, until Saturday morn- Waterbury, Aug./ 30.—GOVErnor {ing with honds fixed at $1,000, | he RN | which to pay the interest on her the inational saclety, "’°"‘d of thef, me which comes due October I. made servance of September 17 as Consti-yshe went to find it yesterday it was | missing. Detective Sergeant William i i ’ ken the | wrhere can be no one fact more[Mitted (0 Zim that He.had |important to our continued w(‘lfarr‘lmonpy and had spent it at the carni- 4 Siarey | The case of George Beuckner, b the con- | harged with being a fugitive from < fixed at $3,000 despite the fact that ‘[“rvrtl:')“ o hational growth, of ProS |Attorney Irving Rachlin, who resyes e et ha|$100 bond. Prosecutor William heen amended indicates that in the is Greenstein stated that Beuckner | being held here on a warrant issued apinion of our people it is not com- |, the Sf i . N e St, A J J pletely perfect. But that it is ’ ugustine suthorier e nearly so as any human docun 1! “"“‘!‘passlng worthless checks. His case D x was continued under bonds awaiting be is my own opinion, and s i | extraditi 3 who stop to read | 0} PERERS. | COLLISION DAMAGE SUIT. Herbert and Frank Moller of Bris« tol have brought suit against the Globe Indemnity Co. of New Haven. The action is based on a collision be- tween an automobile and a motor- cycle on West Main street, New Brit. “It is with the greatest pleasure, urge upon all citi- |in the schools and out of the schools | we study and refresh our memory | {concerning the wis2 provisions of |this, the fundamental charter of our |ain. several ;weeks ago. The writ is liberties. And I especially urge that returnable in the superior court at | we give to it that true support which | Hartford on the first Tuesday in Oc- |can come only from deeds and not | tober. e - from positive _observ- —_———————————————— pance of every law, whether popular or unpopular so long as it is the law of the land.” | In a message sent to the Jewish 31‘ribuno, New York, at the request of | |its editor, who plans to publish it ‘ln a Jewish New Year edition, Gov- | ernor Templeton pleads for mutual | good will, loyalty and confidence be- tween Jews and Gentiles in this country, “Annabelle” is a fox-trot th a melody as lovable as its name. en to the Columbia rd of it Ifiv Ted Lewis and His and, and you'll dance home. with it On the other side is “Love,” an affectionats, fetching foxstrot. At Columbia Dealers A-3957 78¢" Colu New Process HUGHES SPEAKS TONIGHT. Minneapolis, Aug. 30.—Reports of. various committees and sections oc- cupied the attention today of dele- | gates to the annual convention of the American bar association which to- night will hear an address by Secre- tary Hughes on the Monroe Doctrine. KING 1S ELECTED. Bombay, Aug. 30,—The Afridis of Tira have elected a king. He s Syed Badsha. The Afridis are Pa- thans and number eight clans. Columbia Graphophons Compary EVERY HOUR OF EVERY DAY There are more Walk-Overs made than Wher you make all your shoes Walk- any other trademarked shoes in the world. Overs, you get that uniform quality and You can find, in the wide selection of perfection of fit that distinguishes all Walk- Walk-Over styles, shoes for every purpose. Over shoes. David Manning’s Uintk-Crer Shoe Store, 211 Main St.