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S S S L Y S MRS B A S e T R =S e fis: LSRR SITE PICKED FOR EAST XD SCH00L Smith-D'Aogelo Property Is Chosen at Price of $18,000 — | . The Smith-D'Angelo property was | modations be authogized to buy the finally selected as the site for the (fOF emering into contracts for the new achool in the east end at the meeting of the school hoard yester- | day afternoon, and the committee on school accommodations was em- | Claude J, Leroux, $18,157: heating, price | not exceeding $18,000 or, falling in | powered to purchase it at a this. to take condemnation proceed- ing against the tract, | This action, the board hopes, will | bring to a close the long discession | over the most suftable site for a! school In the eastern end of the eity, The discussion has centered on the | site chosen and another, known as | the Pleasant Manor property, near | it, but Mayor A, M, Paonessa object. ed to both sldes and actlon was held | up until he could present his \‘m\'n’ at a meeting of the committee. The | effect of this meting was a new sur- | vey by the committee, the results of which were placed before the board | yesterday. | The castern end of the city is now | divided into two elementary school | districts, the t street and Smijth | The East atreet school with a normal | capacity of 750 puplls, is forced to | accommodate 1028, while the 8mith | school has 754 pupils in & bullding | meant for 650, The copmittee said that it is plain that both structures are overcrowded and relief should he provided as soon as possible. Four solutions were proposed at the com- mittee meeting of October 23. Four Possible Places folution 1 was to enlarge and modernize both the Smith gnd Bast | stret sehool sufficiently to tale care | of tha overcrowding, allowing also a margin for further increase. This plan would involve the purchase of | additional land for each school, and | the removal or destruction of at 1east four dwelling houses, This plan | 1as not heen favorably considered. | Solution 2 was to purchase land at some © enlent point between the Smith and East Street schools, ercct thereon a huilding of not less than 12 rooms with gymnasium and | orinin. This building would be ueed to reccive Grades IV, V, VI ! from hoth Fast Street and Smith schools, and leaving only primary grades, Kindergarten and G 11, 111 in those buildinga, Solution 3 ) redivide the en- tire. territory o railroad tracks making three districts instead of iwo, and ercct a school in south end, not far from Henry street. Also move the Smith school | district lina northerly to include Church street. By this plan, distribution of ehildren would be ap- proximately as follows: Fast Street district Smith district New South End district Salution 4 was to redivi railre districts as follows: st of the trict north of Newington Road, also including Seymour, l'ran!dln." Laurel, Connerton, Olive, Dewey,| Wilson and Bronson strects; the ¥ Street district to include Road and south to and Pleasant street and cast of the .\'.‘ Y. N. H. and H. R. R tracks; the | o Smith district to include all south of Pleasant streot and east of the rail- | road track and east. Dy this plan the distribu- | tion of children wonld be approxi- mately as follows: New North End district .. 400 | Fast Street district 5ty Smith district 650 | Recommends Scecond Proposal ‘The committce eliminated tions 1 and 8 and recommended to | {he hoard the acceptance of solutton 2, Chairman Joseph M. Halloran | Qrawing attention to the fact that Gorbach had withdrawn his option | and some of the Smith-D'Angelo | § property liad besn sold, making |8 condemnation procecd likely President P. I, King of the board | paid that they were now back to the | B original decision. Mr. Kerin |§ moved and Mr. Burr seconded the motlon that the recommen- | dation of the committec accepted, and the motion was pass- | ed unanimously. e Pratt then moved that the Smith-D'Angelo | property be purchased and Mr. Vib- | berts amended the motion to fin- | clude a suitable approach from | man street, There are suitable approaches from the other streets | already. Chairman Halloran oppos- ed the selection, saying that he still belicved the Pleasant Manor site | more economiecal and just as suit- able for school purposcs but added that he would abide by the will of | the majority. The motion was then | carried, Mr. Long being the only commlesioner to vote in opposition. The matter of price was bréught up and it was said that, although no definite sum had actually been men- | B PIVPLES [ASTE NEARLY A YEAR Face Disfigured. Lost Sleep. Cuticura Heals. * Pimples broke out over my chin causing terrible ftching and loss of sleep, They kept growing larger and redder, and the irritation caused me to scratch them, This made my face very sore and &t was disfigured for some time, The trouble lasted for nearly a year, I tried all kinds of skin rem. edies but without success. Finally 1 decided to try Cuticura Soap and. Ointment 8o purchased some, and after using two cakes of Cuticura Boap and one box of Cuticura Ointment T was healed.” (Signed) Miss Blanche Lord, 3¢ Cameron Ave., W. Somerville, Mass. Use Cuticura to get rid of dendruff. atories, Dept X, Malden 41, Riasa where, Boap e Ointment % and e Toicum Try our new Shaving Stick. | Palmer, and Superintendent & H. the | a the | o to the city line south |& #olu- | B that the price should not exceed $17,000; Mr, Vibberts then moved that the committea of school accom- CONSERVATION T OCCUPY GOVERNORS Will Be Main Subject of Nation- Smith-D'Angelo tract and the Chap- man street approach for a price not in excess ot §18,000, the extra $1,000 being allowed for the approach, and, | If this were not possible, eondemna- '_.ls;)‘n pmc;;edlnll al\pu!d |b; hcgm:. mounyh et ol Conference in Florida Smalley School Addition Contracts The board also * authorized the recomMmendations of the committeo — Fla, Nov. 4.—First | han o ) Smalley school addition as follows: | hand knowledge of the “Sunshine Tallahassec General contract, Hayes Congtruc- | State” will bs gained by state exe- tion Co,, $159,890; electrical work, cutives who attend the national Spring & Buckley, 2,821; plumbing, | governors' conference at Jackson- ville, November 17.18, Governor Erleson & Johnson, $19,633. These | Cary A, Hardee of ¥l wero the lowest bidders, except fn | e e ranged a trip for the governors after the business sesslons that will take them through the gmat the case of the electrical work, | where Spring & Buckley presented | the only bid; this, however, Was|yo.gotable growing and oltrus pro- within the estimate and was con-| gyoing sogtions, and thence ovet sldered satlsfactory. ' The commit-| ho Lyerglgdes where they will tee was authorized to enter into| | vlew the drainage opcrations which have been described as tho biggest engineering job in America except the Panama canal The conference will open at 10 a. m, Nov. 17, and during the late afternoon of the next day the gov- these contracts, The board also authorized the committee to Invite blds for work on the Stanley school additlon, Superintendent 8. H, Holmes re- ported that Mrs. Laura P. Mangan, a member of the board, had tele- phoned a requost from the Demo- °.r[r::" :;d m“"hwh"' !nwllwr cratic women of thls clty that the | pth the membars of Governor Central Junior High school b | iardee’s official staff, —will be guests of the Clyde Line Steamship on {ts poat. the Osceola, from Jacksonville to Sanford, They will view the celery and lettuce fields about Sanford and drive to Or- | lando for luncheon. After the luncheon they will go by special train to Tampa and will spend the next day as guests of that city, in- cldentally attending the opening of Gandy bridge, the six-mile struc- thrown open this evening and a | radio installed to obtain election re- turns. Dr, Erle H. Hand, instruc- at the school will be in charge, The board carried the motion made by Mr. Long and seconded by Mr, Pratt that the use of the hall be allowed. Those present at the mecting wera President P. ¥, King, *Joseph M. Halloran, Secretary X. M. Pratt, W, | J. Kerin, H. T. Burr, Mrs. Bffie G, | ture across Old Tampa Bay, that Kimball, W. J. Long, George W, | Wil cut the distanes .between St. Traut, G. Vibberts, Virgil M. | Petersburg and Tampa from ap- | proximately 50 to about 20 mllcs. The night of Nov. 20 will be spent fn St. Petersburg, and the BEATS GRIM REAPER, next day the governors will be | driven by automobiles through the Cedar Rapids, Ta., Nov. 4.—Ells| Cuttin, belleved hero to be the last] Sore® o Section of Hillsborough, survivor of the tmmortal Light Rri- | oot S1¢, SUEREnds, counties, gade, cast his vote yesterday. It was | \'p’v .,.,‘,h, ,,‘1', & ¢ e B for Coolidge and Dawes, He s dying | Benass roreaLtie '12327:,‘"07 rom paralysis and physicl aid | aka Al HalErehs bl ke :nt m")",f»rf'lli '}‘,"l came [datasmill ml«:»’ ginnaiget learn whether his vote had helped | D2IM Besch. They will go from w absent voter's ballot, brought | " to hig bedsld point the conference party will dis- | band. The program of business Hoimes. ESTATE TO AID ZIONISTS London, Nov. 4.—An estate which | = Minox, the wonder oint. ment, is the only m):" t will be eventually worth a mlilion Bo known to science thaf pounds has been left for the bene- fit of the Zionist movement by the | will give complete reijef from painful ard unsightly boils, pimples and carbuncles will of an English Jew. The fund will ba uscd to “restore the Jews to :‘h"‘ 'm’;"::’,;:’“ Ouly 5O eents. " Bz MINOX their anclent home in Palestine.” that ——— SPECTAL 3 : HOCO, . i 2 at which | WEDNESDAY! £ i it 2 FE—— e e preceding the trip over the state will consist largely of discussiony of | methods to conserve the natural resources of the states, There also will be some discussion of taxation | problems, it is understood, LONG ENGAGEMENTS of England Adopt That iwlll come before the conference Lovelorn Idea As Slogan—Hasty Marriages | Few In Old Britalo, . | London, Nov. 5.—"Back to the long engagement,” scems to have become a sort of slogan among the lovelorn of Britain, It would be hard to say how the change has come about but evidence accumu- lates that long engagements are again in fashion. The wartime hablt of the hasty marriage-—~not seldom followed by repentance at leisure~—is surely giv- ing wayto the protacted and ro- | mantic engagements of. prim days when Queen Victorla used to spank |one of her grandchildren who aft- | erwards became. Emperor of Ger- many. | “There is a slump In the sale of engagement rings,” confided a court | jeweler, “Young men nowadays do not rush into three or four engage- I ments before they marry. This, { howevor, is balanced by the number of costlincss of presents exchanged in the courtship. The most fash- | fonahle marrlages are generally the result of a six to twelve month's en- gagement.” PUBLIC SPEAKING COURSE, The first class session of the pub- lic epeaking course will convene at 7:30 at the Y. M. C. A, this evening. Much interest has been manifested | in this course by Jocal civic club membera during the past week and an additional enrollment is expectéd | tonight. Prof. Wetael possesses the | faculty of being able to impart his knowledge in a useful way to all listeners. Among those that are al- ready enrolled a E. K. Burr, J. Caliendo, E. R. Dechant, J. A. Elm- William R. Fenn, H. Fogelson, Hamlin, J. J. Kimmel, H. L. Kutscher, R. J. Larson, T. 8. Mc- Auley, D. B. Miller, A. Murchie, G. D. Murray C. D. Parker, L. J. Thompson, I3 A. Mag and Thuro Johnson. THREE NATION AIRDROME | Glelwitz, Sllesla, Nov. 4. — A | “Three Nations' airdrome” will be opened soon on a large flying field south of this eity. At the place the | bonndaries of Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia meet. YOU SAVE HERE. DON'T LET THESB 0 TO 11 A, M. | ROUND, LOIN, PORTERH'SE | ARMOUR'S B STEAK | SHOULDERS | FRESH GROUND zscf s 16c AL DAY SPECIALS ? TO 11 M. {OKED LEAN FRESH SHOULDERS$ “23¢ REGULAR HOUR SALES LEAN BOILING BELK ........... 5S¢ |LE MILK FED VEAL ... 1b. 15 MEATY POT ROASTS BEEL 12¢ |RUMDP* ROASTS VEAL . .. b, 20c¢ o FANCY CHUCK ROASTS B 16c . Ib. 10c 20c . 1b. 25c INE SPRING LAMB . 1h. 32¢ FRESH SPARERIBS RES OF LAMB ..... . . tic [ CLOVER LEAF BACON.. LAMB CHOPS ............... Ib. 25¢ |FRESH PORK CHOPS 9 TO 11 A. M, BEST NO. 1 POTATOES 15D pk. ......19%¢ CONFECTIONERY SUGAR «s 2 1bs. 19c MOHICAN CREAMLERY 2 | FANCY LECTF BEST WHITE WHOLE MILK BUTTER, 2 81¢ EGGS, UURE: LARD... 2 o8, QD C| CHELSE vovroi... OUR DINNER BLEND COFFLE _..... I 3Tc MOHICAN EVAPORATED MILK...3 cans 28c RED BUTTERFLY OOLONG TEA %3 Ib. pkg. 25¢ | BLUE ROSE RICE 5 Ibs. 25¢ MOHICAN MINCE MEAT ........ 2 pkgs. 21c | NEW PEA BEANS 2 Ihs PURE TOMATO CATSUP .. . 2 bots. 25¢ [ CAMPBELL'S SOUPS ......... . 3 cans 26c FRESHLY BAKED FIG BAR ..21bs, 25c | FRESH SHREDDED COCOANUT .... Ih. 25c CREAM OF WHEAT ............... pkg 20c | WHEATINA . pkz. 2lc — GRANULATED SUGAR ........ 5 Ibe SPECIAL ALL DA &:@5 N. B. C. MIXED COOKIES . N. B. C. ROYAL LUNCH 214 1b. Caddy )] 2 i 79 FRESH APPLE WITER - o.. 2 1bs, 29C Large Red BALDWIN A?PLES. A qts. 25¢ LARGE SOUND NATIVE ONIONS E dihst it de LARGE RIPE SWEET JUICY SUNKIST | ORANGES Doz i oios 019 LARGE HEADS EMP. GRAPES. .2 Ibs, LAR! WHIT e lsc CAULIFLOWER. . FANCY SWEET POTATOES . 410 SOLID MEAT ; OYSTERS SMO FINSAN ADDIE 15¢| Tha & Nibonal Ak Wel Eaer e oy Peck ......... 19c NEW MEATY BANANAS . Doz 25(: LETTUCE ....... Ea. 8(: PRUNES ...... 3 Ibs 25c ARGE BUNCHES YELLOW GLOBE FRESH ROASTED 25¢C | yrmvwes ins. 10C 1 NEW SEEDLESS 19¢ = Now Is The Time To “Lay In” Your Winter Supply of Potatoes The Best Green Mountain “Winter” POTATOES 5 7""’1‘\]17)\- C BLUEFISH ... 14 qt. bas. 65¢ SPINACH 15¢ 25¢ NUTS ... Quart ATSINS 1 1b. pkg 2 Bl sacns Bu 90; i 6C | SO0TH AKOTATO ~ EDGATE BRID } Across the Missouri Headachos and dizziness are Na- First of Sexies of Five Placed Al | . s Mobridge, 8 D, Nov, 4, — oA of & Jsordered ot | | south Dakota will face toward this ealth may follow. Avold this by | ' clty in tribute mber 12 when taking TANLAC, theworlds great- | in the presence of a large official eut digestive medicine. TANLAC gathering the state will dedicate | will tone up your stomach, cloanse | ) " " 00 8 Yietory making | your system aud build you up to e B RO MANIRE Metioh | el bl of five bridges over the Missourd | river. The entire quintet of struc- | tures fs scheduled for completion { by the close of next vear — just TANLAC The World's Best Tonlc two years afier the | eleans and purifics the 1t | Battle Creek, It is sold by all grocery —_— The bridges will redeem the | s At All Good Drug Storea | | western half of the wate from a = ¢ * e | eondition of practical isolation dur- | IRNINA '\S Green, They entered the woods Oee Over 40 Million Bottles Sold | | fonytion of practieny wolation, tur- | GUARDING FORESTS (i Wore “expecte o ree Teke Tenlae Vogetable Pile for | | toforo there has not ieen a single | turn Friday, Constipation highway bridge ecross the Missourt | ps o Ve river over its course through ‘the s e Nangers On Duty in New| .0 ororessien #rell i to thé state, | York To Prevent Starting or|marines” arose from the fact that Enthusiasm for project ) when the marines first went afloat TR LS brought rapid eonstruction far sur-| Fresh Fires, they were naturally rather “green” {OTHER D’AZY DEAD. passing orlginal plans. The first| .o N v Nov, 4—Forest|COPCOrning nautical affalrs and step was taken In when a one | ‘-UABY . L, WOV, &==FOrest. ;.14 helicve almost anything that Country's Most Widely Known Nun | mill bridge tax was levied |Janger patrols alded by residents of | was told to them. Came of French Nobility, bridge construction and ma the districts, patrolled the t LS i s nance,” Two years later the of southeastern New York | Washington, Nov. 4.—The funeral [y e Anel N Acheitineral ;::{::::m;d'h:.-:r:::.“ b ;'.v ‘:“;,: e last night and today to guara | For Children’ . uughter ot Count Pierre Denolat. diverted fnto a spectal fand to |VSAINSt the starting of new forest or Children’s ) and onlv, .’y x\:{‘ x:x‘rlmll '}tmtu-’) bulld five bridges. : 1 to check the spread of seve h o ";'n ’_"‘: r'r'm\::t':; Then, fnatead of waiting for the | /2! Which "‘{‘L‘" e ‘]““i“"‘- 2lnce Coug S ) ent of | ¢ nd to accumulate, counties and | YSLerday. At miduight it was be- d [Fheaeeatas m”"f“" T‘hhe Doy Wid " ijijes over the state took advantaga |/\°V°d the more serious of con- 3 and o [taken Inst night to the convent of o¢ o yogislativa provislon and by tions were under control, no- there is no better home treatment :»:m‘wlnr at Torresdale, Pa, f0F| e honds and i y those at Suffern, Arden, and than Linonine. It is & pure, ssfe Mofhor Claire was born 85 years Cribed amounts wufficient to place N°ar Orange La A fresbonn “t”‘;dy "“"1"‘". fl““:" oil, ' Mother Claire B years ', " whole project under way as|fOF five miles along the top of Bea- irish moss, glycerine and other ago in the ancestral home of Count rapldly as the plans could be|CON mountain was bei watched, zuukl_v effective and highly bene- h:\r.y"or»l' rance, She entered the o o0 14 contracts et " |but was not considered a menace cial oils. Children likeit. Linonine order at the age of 30, coming to the | /0 8 Haoe & Abined | $InCe it was confined to brush ar promptly relieves the choked-up United States two yeass later tol HOR LIRS SR-NAYDRAT combine PR ioIa waralianiiyalia R0 condition of the head and throat, teach French in its schools. She died | 1°8'M °; Taote, han & Mite 814 2 | sdirondatk mountain region, but soothes and heals the sore, irritated urday. The funeral toda atzinalfganSi vl contaln silalaliataA0 - vagi v bronical passages, stops the «11‘\‘\- ‘ v 'X;:;;L; ‘}nlm\;,:dM :1_,. spans and 31 plers, the deepest of | TS ,ul :""" SRLY, by natural means and i n ambassador, his wife, Lydy | VPIch Was sunk into bed rodk ho|fre hed been extin Aot v Lieat and nourishment to the whols lsabelle Howard, Mms, Jusserand,|f¢ft Deneath the surfaca of the | ”T““M'm’” i system, thus helping the child throw wife of the French ambassador, and | Water: S W tTiie b aas 160 oo (aibe of the cold, AV the sme time it oAty othor promiaeatiiniaaclal and e ¥ its efforts b supplies new strength and nourish~ Lt e yesterday upon appeal of relatives in ment to the wasted tissues. Wise diplomatic life A world-wide agriculturai census | the search for three Albany hunters mothersareneverwithout Linonine. - will be_taken in 1930 by the Inter- |missing In the fire area about the Sold by all | GIRL ADMITS sTeALING 15 |national Institute of Agriculture at | Fulton They are De Witt JSoc. ond $L80 . et L S Roma, G. Goe: | A 14 year old hoy and girl wera Geew = apprehended by Pollceman Thomas | I, Feeney yesterday afternoon and turned over to Probatlon Officer Edward C. Connolly. The girl ad- mitted to the policeman that she stole a bankhook belonging to an- other girl a secured $15 on It at the school savings bank, The boy admltted 4hat he had smashed elec- | tric lights on Lawlor street. | 666 s n Preseription preparad for Colds, Fever and Grippe tix the most specdy rereedy w 0w Preventing Pneumonia 2 | o T T T e T e T R Conelipation makes bright children dull— give them relief with Kellogg's Bran | Constipation dulls the youthful mind| causes regular, healthy, hormal aet ~makes children backward in their| For it works as nature works, It studies=-makes them listless—and can| ALL bran. Jead to serious diseases. Constipation Have your children eaf it regul ~two tablespoonfuls daily~in chro eases, with every meal. Eat it milk or eream. Bprinkle it over ot! is a dangerous discase. You cannot afford to take chances in getting relief, You cannot afford to experiment or put off. Kellogg’s | cercals. Cook it with hot £ ]1!.‘4nvlnn|w,'a x'\\u'l—]uy uanent yelief | it §y the wonderful Tecipes on if eaten regular ¥ Even in the most package. ; chronic cases of coustipntion it is| © o . : guaranteed to bring resulis, I£ it fails,| . The flavor is delicious—g. eriap, nuf| your grocer will ret your moncy, flavor tl_m: duhnhh' the tastef Kollogg’s Bran, cooked and krum.| Diffcrent by far from ordisary brany blod, has brought zelief to thousands | Which azo unpalatable. I it is ALL bran. Remember, only ALL bran can be 100 per cont offcctive, That is why Kellogg’s Bran is recommended by doctors. It sweeps, cooked and krumbled, to your ehilds Eat it yourself, The lea Made iy Jegin eerving Kellogg’s B:a to-da hotels and clubs serve it, PALA HAROLD LLOYD In “HOT WATER' Maple Hill Manor]| site now before it is too late. selection. and find ocut the Road to Success. pendant of the rent sharks. an OVERLAND TOURING CAR. TR TERMS gb TER i = = — 4 o] a2l - t_,j ] e See Windew Display at (. L. PIERCE CO. MUSIC STORE 246 MAIN ST., NEW BRITAIN i A 51 Still offers you the chance of a lifetime to secure a building lot in a most desirable location, within a few minutes ride of the center of the city, at a price within your means. $49 to $399 For lots 50x150 and 350x 160 — few higher. Terms to suit your pocket- book. Don’t neglect opportunity when it knocks at your door. the lucky ones who are looking to the future. Unexcelled locations; wonderful bargains, We assist in financing the building of your home when you are ready to build. What more do you want? Talk with the salesmen on the ground Re e i Car Leaves Central Square, 2 p. m. Da EPiaiianN = L@v COMPANY SALESMEN ON PROPERTY UNTII Offices Open Evenings until 9 o’cleck Join Pick out your home- Visit the property, make your or call at our office owner and be indes and a chance to win a home » presente I - Offices: HARTFORD—252 ASYLUM ST.; ROOM 504 NEW BRITAIN—242 MAIN ST, ROOM 6 DARK [T