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PARKER SHIRTS Neat patterns in Madras, Neckband, French cufTs, Regular $2 10 Men's White Handker- chiefs R(.g. 1Na 18 for F Selected Lot of Plain Colors $2.50 value Reg. $1.59 0 veiue Shivts and Drawers TIES Special lot of Four-in-hand Regular 81,00 i 2 for $1 { MEN'S PZALBRIGGAN 0% Bl Reg. value PARKER SHIRTS Collar attached — and Sport Cuff, Plain tan and striped patte valnes Garters Reg. 8¢ 21'01‘$1 10 I 2f0r55c Reg. $2.50 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, neat Ties 10 French rns, “BIG TEN” SPECIALS FOR Wednesday Morning Men’s Furnishing Department Main Floor BESSE-LELAND’S I'UESDAY, JULY 15, 1024, 88,50 $6.1 Men' Cowhide BELTS Reg. 7 50c¢ PARKER SILK SHIRTS Special Lot of neat patterns. Neckband and SWEATERS Coat style with pockets Values to $8.50 $4.00 AMERICAN HOSIERY White lisle Union Suits, sleeveless-knee, s hort sleeve-ankle—short sleeve three-quarter leg, Reg, £2.50 value $1.69 Men's Plain White and Fancy Border HANKIES 6 for $lv.10 86.00 0 $4.29 . MEN'S FANCY STRIPED MADRAS UNION SUITS Reg. $1.5¢ value 88¢c e ul FAULTLESS NIGHT ROBES Selected lot of $2.00 and £2,50 values $1.29 French Cuff, e o 2 . \ }PB]C\\'skl Wants Conduits | Laid in Broad Street® R . | Alderman Peter J, Pujewski of the Connecticut Company Files nnmnn' fifth ward called at the office of . | Mayor A. Paonessa this morning ith P, U. C. Asking Approval of d | Wit & App! to urge that subways be placed in Use of Ono-Man Cars in Hartford, | Broad street before the work of per- | manent paving is carried out. The 16.—~The Connecti- ¢ouncil has made an appropriation cut company has filed a petition | for the paving job, but did not in- Brechin, Ontario, July 15.—Having | “ith the public utilities commission | gjude the fund for subways. 1'ifth At i .| for an order approving the use of | warders are anxious to have the en- j’,‘;:fl:“’ll;: ‘“:““I“:";"l'q“(‘:“”","f: Jfor | one man cars in this city. Manager | tire job completed at once to avold sckibed T | didod SR N. J. Scott of the Hartford division |(ne necessity of rippin Vo tH boy companions were drowned, M he necessity of ripping up pavements The principal amusement af- | o & "y 10" ves 12 sl the company would | qt u Jater date and the ward alder- forded ‘the visitor is that of being | S4ret Murchison, 16 years old, col- the ‘one man carf | man 1s loading the movement to have | | lapsed yesterday as rescuers found | man is leading the m men ha seen. ap b e : the decislon of the | some of tho recently appropriated | her, half crazed, struggling through % Iis / 3 P 1 | ; Mayor Stevens and | gubway hond AepC il the marshes skirting Lake Simcoe. | COTREDVCT o) Countryman | (s strcer. moneys expended -on ’ » ™ A S0 y his street, With Wilbur Hoskins and Bdgar | oo yav- decided that the matter ting an unregistered automobile, | and Valentine Wisk, charged with |causing to be operated an unregis- tered automobile, had Lheir cases con- tinued for trial until Saturday morn- ing. Klewicki was®rrested yesterday | by "Traftic Polieeman John Stadler at East Main and Main streets when it was learned that the plates on the truck Klewicki s driving belonged to another truck. After questioning Klewicki at the | stadion, Policeman Patrick O'Mara ar- | rested Wisk, who is alleged to be the owner of the truck. e off himself, He in a milk pe Son Raised Row At Home Willizim Jones of 225 West street was found guilty on charges of drunk- enness and breach of the peace, and was sentenced to the state farm. He was arcested by Patrolman George Moffitt after a complaint had been | received by the police that he was |creating a disturbance at his home. His father told the court that (he son came home drunk last night and started an argument with his brother, | using improper language about the house, rayer houses are suggestive ceful Arab mosques only by contrast, The poorer population, | ehiefly of Arfican descent and much | older in the history of the island than Its Arab aristocracy, lives in huts of | thorn and plaited grass,® invariably overrun with Juxurfant gourd vines. | Surrounded by tiny garden plots, in | which tombac, or native tobacco, lens tils, melons, and yams grow abundant- 1y, they are more picturesque outside | than inside, “There is not much to be seen in GIRL DRIFTS IN CANOE ' RETAIN ONE-MAN CARS BUT TWO BOYS DROWN LANDLORD BEATS UP TENANT; FINED §25 Blackjack Used in Argument Over Use of Front Door Joseph Sulek of 99 Gold street did Suspended Jall Sentence | LR AN | Hadibo, not ke the idea of William Kulish, & | ponislaw Koytowski, the alleged | tenant of the house, using the front|proprietor of the store at 122 Lafay- | , ; door to go In and out of the house, .tte street, charged with violating the .. Jouches of Pastoral Beauty 80 when a word failed to stop Kulish, |1jquor law on two counts, was sen- | ‘Nothing could be lovelier than the | Sulek is alleged to have tried to im- tepnced to 60 days in jail when his | sigbt of slender Socotran cattle graz- She eGts Ashore Three Days After Storm In Ontavio Lake and is Found in a Daze by Rescuers Harttord, Juy with flat towers, un-l‘ | | | ! sald yesterday continue using while awaiting commission. Smith, the girl set out from Big Bay press it upon his mind by hitting him over the head with a blackjack sev- eral times. Kulish did not relish tie | treatment with the result that Sulek landed befcre Judge Benjamin W. Al- | ling in police court this morning and | was fined $256 and costs on a charge | of assault. | Sulek pleaded not guilty and told | the court that he had not hit l(ulish" at all, but that the complainant start- | ed to run up the stairs and fell, striking his head on the floor and cutting himself. Several witnesses of the affair testified that Sulek had hit Kulish with something that looked like a blackjack twice on the fore- head, but when he attempted to hit | him the third time, Kulish raised his hand to protect his head and received the blow on the back of the hand. | Thé trouble started over Kulish| using the front door, according to the testimony given the court, but Sulek claimed that it was the result of Kulish kicking Mrs. Sulek several | times while she was sitting on the | porch. He said that Kulish kicked | his wife and when he got up to pro- tect her, Kulish started to run aid fell. Woman Driver Fined $10 Mrs. H. Loulse Stromberg of West Hartford, arrested yesterday after- noon at Franklin square by Traffic Policeman Joseph Kennedy, was fined $10 and costs when arraigned befors | court that he found a the court on a charge without a license. Her arrest follow- ed an investigation in which ‘#he was a truck at Franklin square, W She pleaded guiity, telling the court that it was the first time that she had operated the machine alone, as on all other occasions she had heen accom- | panied by her husband, who is a li- eensed operator, Milk Man Had No License Ezra Baier of Stanley street, charg- ed with operating without a license, of operating | young men at the tent last night but | that Srogl was the only one he could | cateh, involved, having run her machine into | | street, case, which was adjourned yesterday morning until today, was called for disposition, Execution of the srn(hnro‘ was suspended. Koytowski was call- | ed upon the witness stand to testify this nmiorning and he admitted that he had told several lies on the \\'|lnm~'s‘ stand yesterday, saying that he | thought he could get away with it | He insisted, how r, that he was the proprietor of the store and was the | one responsible - for selling liquor | there, Auto Case Continued David A. Raschkow, 44 Camp street charged with violating the city or- dinances by leaving his. automobile on the strect all night, had his case continued until Saturday at the re-| quest of Prosecutor Joseph G. Woods. | Atty. Harry Ginsberg, counsel for ‘Raschkow, agreed to the continuance. Cuts Down Park Fent Jerome Srogi of 11 Oak street, strect, charged with wilfully destroy- ing city property, had his case con- tinued until tomorrow morning to en- able the police to get another youth | it court who is alleged to be the | cut down the tent at Walnut Hill park last night. . The tenf is one plac- ed at the park during the summer for girls to use as a bathing house, Patrolman Otis Hopkins' told number the of He said all the ropes of the tent had been cutyand the youths were just preparing to tear up the canvas when he discovered them. Neighhors Have Quarrel Judgment was suspended in case of Leon Lambert of 666 Fast charged with assaulting Mrs. John Grady of the same address. Mrs., Grady told the court that Lambert started an argument with her yester- day afternoon during which he slap- the ringleader of a gang of youths who | LONG CIVILIZED \Lighthouse Kegper However, Is Reported Eaten ern point of Africa, where a light- the victim of cannibals, has always been associated with much pleasant thoughts than man-eating savages, says a bulletin from the Washington, B, headquarters of the National Geographic soclety, : “For it is the ‘Isle of Frankincense’ from which once came most of the both the west and the east. It is even possible that one of the gifts of the Magi to the Infant Jesus camé from Socotra, for in the past the island was almost the sole source of this highly prized gum. Socotrans Long Civilized “The suggestion that there are can- nibals on Socotra is somewhat sur- prising. The isiand people became at least superficially civilized ages ago Washington, D. C., July 15.—"Soco- | tra, ‘isolated isl st- | ( and off the northeast | prized in Zanzibar. house kkeeper i rumored o have Leey | MUMber about 5,000, and the bulk of | pleasant, aromatic gum burned as in- | cense in the churches and temples of | through the influence of gum traders. | ing knec-deep among the grasses and the palm branches that line the banks of the lagoons near Hadibo. Clouds massed above and mountains near bee | hind: long shadows dappling the wa- | ter, and the sun,turning to gold the tawny flanks of the cattle make a pic- ture of pastoral beauty rare to behold | in this part of the east. “Today Socotra exports practically nothing except ghi, a rancid butter, | highly | onl [ the distant shore. made from goat's milk and The Inhabitants them are of African descent, though Bedouins live in the mountain ‘caves, and the ruling class is Arab. The language is distinct in itself, though possessing many Arabic and Mahri words., It has a wondrous wealth of gurgles and impossible noises in the throat. There are no words for horse or dog, because these animals are not found on the island. A fine breed of camels and domkeys, which are the tamed sons of the wild asses roaming in thousands on the interior plains, are the beasts of burden. “The Socotrans are for the part a pastoral people, living upon their flocks and herds, They have neither inclination nor skill for the industrial arts. The baskets they weave and their earthen pots, fash- joned with a bit of coconut rind in lieu of a potter's wheel, are rude imi- most Point on I'riday in a light .salling craft. They had reached the middle of the lake, when a sudden storm de- scended upon them, partially over. turning the boat and pitching its oc- cupants inte the water. Hoskins and Smith, realizing that the disabled craft would not Iwir them all, shouted te their companion | to “hang on,” bade her adien, and in the gathering gloom headed for They sank before they got out of sight, Miss Murchison | said. She rode out the storm in the drifting craft and then for seventy- | two hours drifted about the lake. | Last night the shifting winds | grounded the hoat on Concord Polnt. | Rescuers found the girl there, grop- ing- and stumbling her way toward satety. She will recover, it was said, unless | pneumonia sets in. i | i specijalists. | company | violation | man cars. |W. T. S]oper Makes a The Bentley School of Account- ghould he referred to the board of | -u:n:wn for decision as to pru-lPla“ to HOD Ofi»‘ Tomorrow sy | For Their Trip to London Corporation Counsel Countryman | is to send an official note to the By The Associated Press, calling attention to the| Papis, July 15.—Tired and weary of the Tucker grant and|from their 18,000 mile battle against the aldermanic order cffective today. the air, the United States army vound It is the view of city officials that the | the world fliers today took a breath- municipality should vesist compliance | \ne snell in Paris and planned to hop with the council ruling banning one|off for London early in the morning. | " The pllots of the three planes and | their assistants landed safely at Le w[ Bourget airdrome yesterday afternoon B : 6 days behind their original sched- “Hole-in-One” in France |, "It WIS ‘eain o 12 days €0 W. T. Sloper, who is spending the | their credit since they left Tokio. They summer abroad, played a 78 round of | came down on Le Bourget air field golf over the “St. Jean-de-Luce” |and were almost overcome by the en- course and made a 160-yard “hole in | thusiasm of their reception. one.” ¢ New Rritain has reason in any- | the world to be proud of the Herald Herald classified ads cclipse ic‘assi“ml ad section. thing for saving your valuable time. for success in husiness, because business is a 'profession which demands trained The days of apprenticeship belong to the past. accountant. It appeals particu- 5 iy | tations of the southern Arab's handi- They were at one time Christians, but | work, Those who live by the sea catch since the seventeenth century have | fish or dive for mother-ot-pear]: They been Mohammedans. They are ruled by a Sultan under British protection. Nor is the island small; it is nearly half as large as Crete or Porto Rico. ocotra is not often visited westerners, but this is rather because of the religlous jealousy of the sultan than because of any danger from #he natives. The latter were described a few years ago by a visitor writing for the National Geographic society as ‘a kindly folk, hospitable and quite by | have a most ingenlous ‘telescope’ for | spying out the wonders that lie at the ocean's bottom. It is simply a kere- sene oil can, ‘made in America,’ with a sheet of glass set into one'side. Into the opposite side the observer thrusts his head, and 'with the glass bottom well down into the water he is rowed slowly back and ferth, mouth and eyes well protected from the salt wa- ter, which further serves him as a | magnifying lens.” ing and Finance trains men for positions in which highly special- ized lnowledge is a requisite, It is the largest professional school of collegiate grade in the world devoted exclusively to training men for the duties of office man- ager, cost accountant, auditor, treasurer, credit man, and public Jarly to high school and college graduates who desire to be leaders in the business world. Day sessions begin on Septem- ber 17. Hours 9:30 to 4:00. Tui- tion $225, payable in ten equal in- stallments, or $215 if paid for the year in advance. To be Bentley trained carries prestige in business Send for day or evening catalog. was fined $10 and costs. He was ar- rested early this morning by Super- numerary Policeman Joseph Hayes, Baier told the court that he has had & licensed driver with him for the past twvo weeks while he was learning ¢6 operate. but this morning, he st ped her in the face. After listening to the testimony, Judge Alling said that he did not doubt but Lambert had provocation to strike the com- plainant. Klewicki And Wisk In Court Joseph Klewleld, charged with op- harmless'. Continuing, he wrote: “Hadiho, the capital, er Tamarida, as the Arabs |call it, from Tamar, the date-fruit | tree, is a collection of flat-roofed white houses scattered among the The sultan’s ‘palace’ is a large THE BENTLEY SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE 921 Bolyston - Street, -Boston, Mass Agar-agar is a pearly white, shiny product invaluable to medical re- search, to the hospital, kitchen, cot- | ton mill and brewer. It's raw ma- | terfal is seaweed, | paims. [ 3 73 ‘ HADOWPROOF SLIPS ; | 98¢ | | Made of good quality nainsook—filet lace trimmed—hip hems— \ Sizes 36 to 44. ! WOMANS JAPPAREL SPECIALTIES HIDOLETGVWN == NEW BRITAIN SURF SATIN BATHING SUITS Regularly $2.98 Made of extra heavy surt satin~hand embroidered, Sizes 36 to 46. A SMASHING SALE TOMORROW A. M. ON Misses’ =i Ladies’ Tricolette Dresses $3.98 Values to $12.98 Heavy Wool Jersey BATHING SUITS $4.59 Regularly $5.98 Light, medium, dark colors Sizes 36 to 14 SKID BOOTS" SILK SWEATLERS $2.98 Values tno $4.98 An assortment that we just made a fortunate purchase on. Size 36 to 11, White and Novelty eolors SLEEVELESS SWEATERS $1.98 Values to $3.98. White and Colors, Sizes 36 to 44 DIMITY WAISTS $1.59 Bobby Collars—Roll Collars ANl tailored styles that are so good te wear with the sleeveless sweaters, o oy g SKID BOOTS” SWEATERS $1.98 Made of estra quality fine woolen yarns bright colored trimmings, ¢ V/onderful straight line styles that are the “real” thing for vacation wear. The effect of a silk dress at a price lower than a cotton dress. White w Colors—Navy— (Coco— Tan— Grey— Black Sizes 36 to 16 LINEN KNICKERS $2.79 Sade of geod quality linen—cut full—well made. White, natu; UNDER ARM BAGS $1.50 Good quality leather—stronz fram DBlacks, 5 None On Approv-| —See Them In the Window Tonight— —Be Here Early Tomorrow A, M.— No Alterations Browns.