New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 27, 1924, Page 2

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Z-ONLY ‘A cream for tir- ed, tender, smart- ing and swollen §5c box THE 169-171 Main St Fall Hats The hat to sult your face; color to please your fancy — yet & shade in keeping with fashion's eolor decree, Featuring fall's Sexible brim that can be rolled || up or snapped down—shades of dawn gray, new powder blue sasts, fincluding the smart prowns, tans and pastel greon. $3.00 .. $7.00 HO 93:99. SFALLS | Isylum Street #]¢ Pays To Buy Our Kind” Yarge Prime Soft Shell . Crabs Fresh Caught Swordfish Eastern White Halibut Penobscot Salmon Rockport Cod Steak Boston Bluefish Steak Fresh Caught Block Island Mackerel Large Cape Butterfish Large Cape Porgies Large Native Eels Large Shore Haddock Live and Boiled Shrimp Live and Boiled Lobster . Round and Long Clams Salt Cod ........ 18¢c Ibh. 3 Ibs. for ........... 50c Fancy Large Scallops 'MOORE BROS. Sanitary Fish Market ! 80 COMMERCIAL ST. Open until 9 p. m. | Thursday THE BEST| WINTER| MIIS!.K PASTEURIZED) Winter means milking by lamplight—and carelessness on the milker's part. Therefore, the finest milk is often contam- \CITY GOVERNMENT ™ ATTHE BOYS' CLUB Mayor and Department Olliclals {0 Rule This Winter ment to tary condit he | prot of their lear: ter anke 1 to « plain b ments. this year and « ir depa b dos do m at the ¢ wi iy boy wishing to this depart y work which ey wi an telephone in and 1 to do the work Al partment boy joba ca utar W, W Junior have indu which will consist of ¢ printing, and radio as lust winter, The drum corps, w will march in the American Legion parade in Torring ton Saturday, will continue under the direction of Peter McCrann. A permanent camp is hoped for next summer, but as few of the elub members have any too much ready me, opportunity will be ) the boys to turn over to Mr, Skinner any small sums they may wish. As soon as a boy has a dollar to his credit, the money will be transferred to some local bank, In this boys will accumulate enough to take them to camp for at least a weak and that they will acquire the habit of savin lirector of will the Achleveme neral supe tivities, over i cani carpentry cash at one Entertainments Planned | A great variety of entertainments is projected for the coming season. On October 21, Eddy-Glover post, American Legion will stage a show of some sort for the hoys, while the Rotary club, Elks, Lions and Ki- wanis club are hooked for other nights during the winter. The ladies’ auxiliary of the club will run parties appropriate to Washington's birth- day and Christmas and is planning to hold free dances, properly super- vised, for the older club members and their girl friends, Parties are also planned for the intermediate |and junior classes. Tntra-club jealousy 1in - athletics will be eliminated this year as there will be no “Crescents,” “Panthers, ete., claiming the championship of the city or state. Tnstead, there will be just Boys' club teams, a senlor, a junior, and an intermediate team, with probably a senior second team. Plans are under v for a state bas- ketball leagne, Meriden and Bristol having already signed and only one more city, preferably Hartford, be- ing necessary, There will also he hasketball, vol- ley ball, and indoor haseball leagues within the elub as last year, these serving as training schools for the members of the official club teams, Gym classes will be arranged ac- cording to the age of the hoys, while a leaders' class is planned to provide assistants for Ray Anderson in handling the other The club opens officially next Tuesday, but the first two weeks will probably de . devoted mainly to registering the boys. When Mr. Skinner took the club over last fall it practically without a member- ship, but he has built it up to 8§00 and has his eye on the 1,000 mark for this winter, r——‘ DENTISTS A. B. Johnson, D. D. S. T. R. Johnson, D. D. S. Gas—Oxygen—X-rays National Bank Bldg. NURSE IN ATTENDANCE — e Do not fret or suffer loss Call us up, for you're the hoss, ¢ Mr. Skinner hopes that the | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST EST VIRGINIA, LAST OF DREADNAUGHTS, ON TRIAL ois Will Last Twe Weeks and Wil Be Most Inclusive of Any Ever Given Warship Maine, Aug. 27.=The West Virgis P if America’s baitle » be completed for the the agreement \ament, began Penobscot Bay tor will last two weeks most eatensive ever American warship standardization trial undeér light acement, one of three standardi ) Lests was the Hrst of the runs for the observation of the ma- board today, Similar tests end maximum displace be maae latbr, It s the three trials have years under n je that all West Vrginia, although in di tranked by Japanese and ps now built or s In some respects a more verful fghting machine in action can take a position 20 miles enemy and with her battery ineh guns, drop eight | and explosives on their nsions ¢ ding eletrically driven, designed 4, with a fuel ca- 0 miles, 18 624 foet has a 97 foot beam end dis- )0 tons, Captain Thomas her commander, and has a crew of 1,400 men, DAWES BACK HOME ON HIS BIRTHDAY Celebrates 59th Anniversary by | Preparing His Next Speech — | By The Amsociated Pres Evanston, Ill, Aug. 27.—Charles | G. Dawes, republican candidate for | vice-president, spent today—his fifty- | ninth birthday—at his home at work on the address he will make Friday night at Lincoln, Neb. Arrival home from his speaking | trip to Maine last night permitted Mr. Dawes to realize his desire to spend his birthday with his family. | No special observance of the day was planned except a birthday dinner tonight at which members of his campaign travelling party, including newspaper correspondents, will be 5. The vice-presidential candidate will speak extemporaneously at Lin- | coln, Neb., but he had before him today for study considerable statisti- cal information on the agricultural | problem, which will be principal subject of his address. Willlam M. Butler, chairman of | the republican national committee, and Representatlve Sanders of In- diana, head of the speakers' bu- reau of the national committee, probably will confer with Mr. Dawes before his departure Thurs- day night for Linceln. The speak- ing trip itinerary of the nominee has | not been definitely concluded beyond *the Lincoln address, and this matter will be discussed at the conference. Mr. Dawes probably will return to Evanston after his Lincoln ad- dress 'and probably will not start on another trip until after Labor Day. Requests for addresses are on file from the republican organizations of almost every state, and an especially urgent request has been made by National Committeeman Taylor of Tennesée. In event of & trip to Ten- nesece it is considered likely that one or two speeches also will be made in Kentucky. RS POLO PLAYERS FRAOCTICE. Westbury, N. Y., Aug. 27.—Prac- | tice polo matches among the Ameri- | can and British internationalists for the challenge cup series was called | oit today for the second straight |day Due to heavy rains the fleld | was not in condition for the sched- uled match between the American “Big Four” and a picked combina- | tion Bricks were in use considerably | more than a thousand years ago. Buys $ 5000 Accident Insurance For One Day | Month 3Month: $45 ‘%10 For your convenience /tna Accident Tickets are sold at all ticket offices of the NY,NH.&HRR Ask The Man At The Window Sure Relief | 'QR INDIGESTION ) o' water Sure Relief | | 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhers —————e e BLEASELEADING "~ INS.C. PRINARY Spirited Four-Cornered Contest For U, §. Senate Columbia, 8 C, Aug 27T.—=For. mer Governor Cole L, Blease early |today Maintained a lead in the four | cornered race for the senatorinl nomination in yesterday's |eratie primary, 926 of the state's 1,464 precincts giving him 45,017 | | votes, Represcntative James .| | Byrnes 39,447, Nathaniel B, Dial, the incumb 25,832, and John J MeMahan 8,175 In the gubernatorial contest, Thomas G. McLeod, incumbent ap- parently held a commanding load |over John T. Duncan, his only op- ponent, Representative J. J. McSwain, of | the fourth district, and. A, H, Casque of the sixth, were unopposed while Representatives Fred H. Dominick | of the third, W, I, Stevenson of the | ftth, and H. P. Fulmer of the sev- enth, were running well ahecad ..[i thelr opponents. Representative W. | T, Logan was second to Thomas . | McMillan in a closely demo- contested | four cornered race in the first dis-| trict, and in the second, where a vacancy was left by the decision of | Representative Byrnes to oppose | Dial, five candidates ranged in| strength from 1,630 to 3,317 with W. B. Hare and B. R. Tillman| DAVIS COINS NEW | CAMPAIGN PHRASES Adds ‘Common Honesty, Justice| and Courage’ to His Stock On Board the Metropolitan Ex- press, en route to New York, at| Pittsburgh, Aug. 27.—Having opened | his campaign in the middlewest ye terday with an address at Columbus, Ohio, John W. Davls, the demo- cratic candidate, was returning to New York today to remain until next | Sunday when he will set forth on his | first extended speaking tour. far west. After speaking at Wheel- ing, W. Va,, on Labor Day, and vis- | iting western headquarters at Chi- cago, the nominee will go to Omaha, Neb., where under present plans he will deliver an address on Septem- | ber 6. Beyond that date, Mr. Davis' itin- erary has been arranged only tenta. tively. He may visit Lincoln, Neb., to make an address on September 7 and then proceed to Denver, Colo, | to speak there on the f.llowing day. | Before returning to his eas headquarters at New York he may speak also at Kansas City and St Louis. democratic convention yesterday, the | democratic nominee added to his| slogan of “common honesty” in gov- ernment, two others—"common jus- tice” and “common courage.” Common justice is needed in legis. lation, he declared, referring dire ly to the Fordney-McCumber tariff | bill and tax reduction. | In proposing “common courage,’ Mr. Davis declared this was needed in both domestic and foreign alfairs. He said he did not want the Ameri- can government to tip toe behind | closed doors with its unofficial ob- servers “peeping through every in- ternational keyhole.” He wanted the | United States as a nation, he eaid, to | stand on an equality with the other | nations of the world and do her full | share n catablishing a full and lust- | ing peace for all mankind. | MELLONS START HOME. | Leave Paris for Cherbourg and Will | sail on Liner Majestic, Paris, Aug. 27.—Andrew W. Mel- lon, American sccretary of the treas- | ury, accompanied by his brother, leading. [ That trip will carry him into the 7 In his address to the Ohio state|s | growing worse durin G 0. . PLANNING FOR GREAT FGHT mpaign Will Be Nation-wide in Its Scope —_— (a th, Vi, Aug, 87=The buss al conferences and § me distinet«-tW=this hamiet yestergay as President Coolidge gave over some of his vacation hours to brief vigts with party spokesmen and listened to other voluntary res ports from visitors from all sections whom he received, Representative Tilson of Connees tieut, director of the national coms mittee speakers' bureau in the ast the nation, starting after a and later ver seplember 9, the president e with with Vergiont party leaders John Barrett of Grafton, Vi, as 2 member of the Coolidge indepen- dent information group, brought a yeport of gains by the president in the northwest s shown in & sure vey conduted sinee he delivered his tance and compared speech of Ac survey made on his with a similar nomination, Members of “the first hational Grange tour” slipped oft thelr course in a journey through this section to meet President and Mrs, Coolldge this morning and the party, repres senting . farmers of twelve middle western states, likewiso expressed in interviews, & belief that republican success was In line in November, al times, during the day Mr left his fathers' home here groups of tourists, ov Coolid to we Arrangements were made by Mr Tilson at the conference with Farl Kinsley, national republican com- mittcoman from this state, and some tors this morning to open a tour which will follow the Lincoln highway from coast to coast with @ meeting here September 9. The expedition, to be known as “the Colidge-Dawes speaking tour” will visit 300 cities on the five thousand mile course, members of the party W& in six motor cars, under he direction of A. W. Jeffries of Omaha, Neb. The following states will be visited rermont, New Hampshire, Massa- chusetts, York, New Jersoy, pennsylvania, Ohio, Tndiana, THin Jowa, Nebraska, Wyoming, Utah, lifornia, Oregon and Wash- come other state lead trav ew vada, C ington. HERRIOT T0 SIGN DAWES AGREFMENT French Parliament Has Ratified Plan—Germany o Act sign the London agreement and do everything neces: to put the Dawes plan into effect, as the chem- ber of deputies previously sanctioned his course by voting its confidence inday morning after an all night jon. The vote in the senate, ch came after a long debate, was v 206 to 40. M. Herriot and the reparation commission now are awaiting the vote in the German Reichstag before taking further, action, but in view of the weakeging nationalist opposition Jittle doubt is felt here about the German acceptance and the final ignature of the agreement on Sat- urday at London. The Belgian cabinet has already given its ratification without bring- ing the matter before parliament, as there is no appreciable controversy in that country over the accepta- bility of the accord. Envoy ‘Bancroft Suits Japanese Government By The Assoclated Prese. Tokio, Aug. 27.—The Japanese government has informed the gov- rnment of the United States that Fdgar Addison Bancroft, named as American ambassador to Toklo, is persona grata. IMPLOYED Aug. 27.—Unemployment Britain has been steadily the last fe weeks and last week the total was estimated at 1,128,000, an increase 30,000 over the previous week's total, it was annofinced today. Tondon, in Great Richard B. Mellon of Pittsburgh, and the latter’s wife and daughter,| left today for Cherbourg to embark for home on the liner Majestic. | Secretary Mellons’ nephew went | | aboard the liner at Southampton and | his daughter, Miss Alisa, is remain- | ing here for a few days with her | chaperon, Miss Sylvester. Sccretary Mellon spent the last | part of his visit quietly in sightsee- ing and posing for a portrait. He has seen no members of the French government since his recent lunch- eon with Premier Herriot, Finance Minnater Clementel and a few oth- his visit | | ers, and throughout kept entirely unofficial |Aviator Flies From Detrol Boston, Aug. 27.—Lieutenant Cur- it to Boston | - to Cool You off Pep-o-mint . WEE SAVERS There’s nothing i o7 1034, Long Island, can carry service, according to present the body. 900 MEET DEATH - INNEW SCOURGE Distase Resembling Spinal Men- ingitis Epidemic in Japan By The Assoclated Press. Tokio, Aug. 27.—Several of the most eminent physicians have left hurriedly for the western provinces where a new epidemic, resembling spinal meningitis is reported to be raging, causing nearly 900 deaths in recent weeks, The local physicians call it “nar- coleptic meningitis.” The victims undergo the usual symptoms of spinal meningitis and then fall into a comatose state, remaining so until death. The mortality is at the rate of 65 per cent. : The provinces affected are Kaga- wa, Tokushima, Okayama and Toyel- ma, on the island of Shikoku. Dispatches from the provinces in- dicate that the epidemic has spread throughout western Hondu, the main jsland of Japan, as well as through- out Shikoku. Besides fresh out- breaks in Tokushima and Kagawa prefectures, where it originated, the following districts have been added to the affected list: Nagana, where it is estimated there have been a hundred cases with a death rate of eighty per cent; Ishikawa, 25 cases; — ——— MAG NEWS Will Be Published In The Herald, Thursday, Aug. 28th The loaf in the Diamond Wrapper ‘Anything is liable to happen now. 80 passengers or a This giant plane, recently tested at Curtiss Field, heavy load of freight, It will be used in freight width of plans. Note the two propellors and the great [Truckload of Liquor Seized By Policeman Central Falls, R. I, Aug. 2T.—A truck loaded with 79 cases of liquer, valued at more than 84,000, was selzed and James 7. Fitzgerald of Newport, R. I, and Robert Morria of Providence, R, I., were arrested by a patrolman. The policeman smelled their cargo and gave chase in an automobile, Hyoko, in which Kobe is situated, 13 deaths; Hiroshima, Alchi and Ya- muchl. Soon after the victim falls into a comatose state death occurs. It was first described by Dr. Keijl Takano of the government epidemic institute in 1910, . Every summer a few cases have reported in the western prefectures but never so epidemic or virulent, WISE, SMITH & CO., Hartford Inc. Hartford $5 Worth of WALLPAPER For $2.49 A remark!ble. opportunity to repaper your rooms be- fore the busy Fall season and at the same time save 50%. 36 patterns to select from, including Wall Paper for Living Room, Dining Room, Hall and Bedroom. Each lot con- tains 10 rolls of paper and 20 yards of border. Many other bargains, values 10 to 60c, on sale at 5¢ to 39¢. NOW PAINT We Carry the Best in Paints, Varnishes, Enamels, ete. Is the Best Time of Year to The Spirit of New England Brave Paul Revere in Seventy-five Made history as you’ve read Today the housewife spreads the news Of Good New England Bread A Real Home Loaf Made from a home recipe—just as the housewives showed us— WORTHY OF ITS NAME NEW ENGLAND BREAD ___ e tis Moffat landed here last night in | |a Curtis pursui which he had | Do Your Feet Suffer? ram Detrot, tasted by dirt, ete. Our CLARIFYING removes the ¢irt and our PASTEURIZ- ING the germs that may exist in the milk—you obtain a SAIE MILK, winter or summer when you buy OURS. Try it Great care for small cost safe moving without dama or loss, We're responsible moy 3 2”7.33 _@]}{/M’t[fly St Josesh Arbouré Jon flown from Detroit, having stopped | more | en route at Mitchel Field, New York, | [T e k. e[ s e G | pful heel afi A e, w6 Inurniok | o4 his flight Monday morning , ng lir wenr flexible feath- | s w we make | - our VELVET RIBBON. iptee o e ng| _Long ends of velvet white ribbon | rts, which can et | fall from a corsage of small white | sions »n' feet | MOVING - TRUCKING - SHIPPING | NEW YORK TRIDS DAILY " ¢'\astly difierent shapes of | flowers that are the only (rimming OFFICE AT S-MAIDEN LANE || oiiic™, ol area® fends, mads =ve| en a black chiffon gown, [ — P | iNew England Bakery Co., A sold_exclusively by Cookies—the kind you liked when a | Many continge to | | United Milk Co. | 49 Woodland Street New Britain Phone 1610 02 ENERAN Booth Bloek. | child—should always be flavored vith Baker's Extracts, All good grocers, Always Good Taste Er (OKBranch) Hartford ’ nings !

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