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| Tawucied W large ‘oL owe LIGHT AND POWER EMPLOYES FROLIC Successlul and Enjoyable Outing at Double Beach vne hundred and ten local ems Pluyes ot tae Lounecticut Light and cUneEr L08 New Brnaln force wsieed UNAnILOUslY Luls mormng busb Lie vuting and fleld day waicd Liey Mluged yesleramy afternoon and eyeling ut Louble beach, Branford, Wus Ly wost successtul ever held, Alluetic, events for both girs and licu with handsome prizes for tue WILLCLS, 4 ¥IX courss dinner and wdutillg witerwarus made the pro- BlUlL Wi Interesting gne from sart U lig, @iy Were Was 1ot onet duil At a0 the entire elght hours wpil uway trom New Bfitain, 44v locul uelegation Jett vhe Bur- v pUCRILE BPUCE WL AZIBU yester Luy LUOL LY WULO, Grriving 4l lhe wuviC doout ¢ p,om,, when a luncn Ve otrveds Llis Wus followed by uu Catiung uve laaing ball game be- VWLl e married men and the nen, e SINgic men winning ¢ W Wit the assisiance of the um- Vies Al nembers ol Lhe winning Codld received prizes of clgarettes, Luv many dausirable prizes oifered Lo Tuc wilaers of* lhe other events sumber of cu- Wi, Biris' potato race, Miss bidaul racy proved the speedlest ul ealiicling up lue elusive spuds anu vds preseiied with 6 silver speons, vames Maciell demonstrated Gl U could Lrow Lhe basebalo lug most proficiency, winning @ sliver sandwica tray. Most of the ail1 puired up tor the three-legged saCe wud Miss Madeline Brown and sie Marie Chisholm, who had evi- welly been pracucing Lor the event secrctly, hopped off with the prize, #ilk staekings and vacuum bottle, ‘there were some startling upsels #f torm in the mens events. Ray- mond Terwilliger surprised all by romping home in first place in the 1U0-yard dash, winning a handsome auto lunch set. Walter Lowell took sccond prize, a pocket knife, Ter- williger, Lowell, Noe and Sandell proved to be the lucky quartet the men's relay race and brought Lack a supply of cigars. At the conclusion of the strenuous aiternoon's program a delicious shore dinner was served, followed by dancing until late {in the evening, when the return to New Britain started, prves oy SEN LADD'S FUNERAL Simple Services Are from Washington Undertaking Establishment, . Washington, June 25 (P—Simple tuneral services for Senator Edwin 1". Ladd of North Dakota, who died Monday in Baitimore, will be today at an undertaking establish- ment. Only members of the family, intimat~ friends and g 'congressionat committee of honor will attend. After the services the body will be | piaced in a vault at Glenwood ceme- fery until Mrs, Ladd, who collapsed | after the death of her husban ihle to accompany it from Wi tngton. While announcement has heen made that interment would be at 1Fargo, Mrs. Ladd now is unde cided whether burial will be ther or in Maine, the scnator's native state. The funeral services will be con ducted by the chaplain of the sen the Rev, J. J. Muir, the Rev. Thoma the Takoma chureh, ate, Lark, pastor ot Park Presbyterian which the senator attended fepators Irazier of North Dakota, Walsh of Montana and Heflin of \labama will deliver brief culogies. PAYS HIGH PRICE $116,000 Is Purchase Money Vor ’Seat On New Lachange. June 25 (M—Thé high- New York, in | Held Today held | assisted Ly’ TRLS OUTNUNBER BYSATN.B. .S, (Continued from First Page) Kelly, Frances Mary Kerber, Eilcen Ryan King, Loulse Honrlette Klopp, Emma Lilllan Koerber, Bessic Kop- lowitz, 1da Z. Kramer, Alice Victor- ia Larsen, Evelyn Frida Larson, Gladys Loulse Larsen, Leonle Marle Liegey, Dagny Ellzabeth Lundin, El- Jen Alva Lundqulst, Mary 'Alice Lyneh, Gl Marguerite Tereso Maloney, Maty Elizabeth Martin, Mae Mildred Me- Cabe, Elva Allda McKirdy, Anna Mary Monchops, Ida Dora Mucke, Alice Catherine Murphy, Linda Jen- nie Negrl, Alma Nelson, Agnes Mar- garet O'Connell, Mildred English O'Dell, Josephine Muriel Olmstead, Christina. W, 8. Pattison, Esther Mary Perondine, Pauline Ellzabgth Pfersick, Julia Pilkonis, Ruth Bat- bara Prushonsky, Dorohty Reed, Alice Dorothea Regan, leen Marle Regan, Lilllan Harrjet Rich, Hilma Christina Ringquist, Margaret Eileen Ronketty, Elizabeth May Rourke, Dorothy Harrison Ry- der, Edla Sandberg, Catherine Mary Schenck, Elsie Elizabeth Schofield, Doris Evelyu ‘hroedel, Beatrice Mae Selbert, hara Louise Sen- ning, Helon Mary Shanahan, Ra- chael K. Smith, Grace Elma Sor- row, Margaret Elizabeth Streigle, Iréne Elizabeth Torell, Marion Eleanor Tuttle, Bernice Irene Unkel- bach, Grace Gertrude Unkelbach, Mary B, Vick, Mary Josephine | Walsh, Gladys Emmeline Weir, Heleh Veronica Welch, Sophie Wesker, Marcla Wexler, Mae Agnes Kath- Willlams, Ella Pauline Helen Theresa Woods, Sa bian, Charlotte Anita Marjorlé Janet Zehner, Jessic Zevin, Ethel Zicker, Boys Clarence Henry Ahlberg, George J. Barton, Nathan Hyman Basson, Howard Joseph Belser, Jacob N. Berson, Howard = John Beloin, Thomas Joseph Boyle, Miiton Irving Brown, John Michael Cianci, John Hilary Conlin, Wihlllam IHenry Dar- row, Otto John Gaudian, Ralph Hale Gilbert, William Gleason, Raph Clayton Gray, John Grip, Jr., Joseph George Grazulewich, Char John Huber, Roland Archer Hale, Carl Harold Hansen, Howard Edwdrd Hausman, Deming Hewett, Raymond Edward Hinchliffe, Max Horenstein, | Richard Schrey Jewett, Severin Johnson, Paul Walter Kieist, Edward Koplowitz, Abe I'rank Mot- {kin, Samuel Maurice Kramer, Er- win Adolph Lachelt, Charles Levine, Lyman Kehyon Loomis, Willfam' Wolcott, h Yagoo- Women’s Pure Silk Full Fashioned STOCKINGS Reg. $1.98 At $169 98¢ At 89¢ Loulse | ‘White, Helen Wiegand, Phebe Laura | Zakolska, | Leah | Joseph Linar | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, D“!l" MecCue, Russell 8, Matsen, Matthew Meskill, Matthew Miecz- kowskl, Stanley John Milewski, James Robert Miller, David Morri- son, Ernest George Martin Neipp, John Joseph Phalon, Louis R, Plser, Clinton Albert Potter, Carl Henry Ramm, Irving Gilbert Rau, Max H. Relcher, Edward Bagor Rogin, HarrySRudofan, Howard Wilson Ry- der, Harold J. Schechtman, Russell Willlam - Scoville, Carl Leonard Swanson, John Sebastian Terranova, Norman K. Willlams, Lewis Harold Wintz, NAME NEW BRITAINITE Arthur Lamb 1s Appointed as an Assessor of the Town of West Haven—Endorsed by Blodgett, West Haven, Conn,, June 24—Ar- thur Lamb, of New Britain, was ap- pointed assessor of this town by lectman J, A, Alling today, effective July 7, under a plan reorganizing the taxation system, The appointee was endorsed by | Btate Tax Commissloner Blodgett, who had assisted the town in | straightening out. its tax problems. Signs of Consciousness New York, June for the early recovery of Mrs. J. P. Morgap, wife of the financier, who | | has been ill of sleeping sickness at | her summer home near Glen Cove, Morgan for the first time since she fell into a state of coma on June 17, gave Indications of returning con- sclousness, ~ Mrs. Morgan's nounced .Saturday passed the cglsla, physiclans that. she an- had ECKENER'S VIEWS He Thinks Pole Can Be Crossed in Dirigible Balloon Berlin, June 25 (A—Dr. Hugo Eckener, director of the Zeppelin company, belleves the North Pole can be crosted In a dirigible as at present constructed, he stated upon his arrival in Berlin today for a conference on the possibilities of or- ganizing an aerial Arctic #zpeditlon, He agreed with Captain Roald | Amundsen that the Pole could be | reached through the air only by |Zeppelin, and said he would give his | funl cooperation. Many experts are expected to gar- |ticipate In the ‘conference here, | which is being held under the aus- |plees of an international committee, | with Dr. {redtjof Nansen, as chair- "'man. Murs. Morgan Today Shows) PLUNBING SYSTEM AT WHITE COURT PAILS For Time President and Wife Could Get Nothing But Hot Water Swampscott, June 26—President Coolldge narrowly escaped a drench- ing on his mornihg walk today. With the skies overcast he ventured from the White Court estate for a stroll along one of the highways. A quarter of a mile from home it be. gan to drizzle and the president immediately retraced his steps, reaching shelter before the rain be- came a steady downpour, There is a possibility that the president and Mrs. Coolidge may break their vacation stay here for a week or ten day visit early in July o Plymouth, Vt, wnere their son, Calvin, is buried and Mr. Coolldge's father resides. In the event they go to Vermont to be there on the first anniversary of their son's death, they would return to Swampscott, probably, to remain until late in the summer, If they do not follow this plan they will pay Plymouth a visit immediately before returning to Washington. The first batch of officlal mall 5 (M — Hopes | | used by several presidents, reached from Washington, transmitted from the White House in a letter pouch Mr. Coolldge today. At the same time he recelved a letter from Gov- ernor Fuller of Massachusetts wel- were strengthened today when Mrs. |coming him to the state and ex- pressing gratification that he had decided to return to Massachusetts for his vacation. With the temperature dropping still lower than on yesterday some inconvenience was experienced by the presidemt and Mrs. Coolidge by the fallure of the hot water system at White Court to function prop- erly, Wiesen it was put in operation It heated all the water and it was impossible to draw cold water from the pipes. A hurry call was put in for a Swampscott plumber who made everything ship-shape in quick order. CHURCH FLAREUP Controversy Between Modernists and Fundamentalists Has Brief Echo in England, Cardiff, Wales, June 25 (®—The controversy between fundamental- Ism and modernism which has vexed some churches in the United States flickered briefly here today during the session of the alllance of Preshy- terlan churches, but almost fmmedi- ately was snuffed out and djed through lack of vital Interest in the question, The congregations on this side of the Atlantic are not concerned with the issue, no matter how important it may be in America, George Richards, Lancaster, Pa., theological seminary brought up the question stating the position of west- ern Presbyterians to be a rejection of fundamentalism but not an ac- ceptance of modernism, Subsequent discussion made it clear that representatives of Euro- pean churches see no necessity for the introduction of the problvm in thelr fields. Mrs. Jones of Waterpury, Conn., Speaks Highly of Nox-Ri-Tis “After taking two treatments of the famous NOX-RI-TIS rheuma- tiem medicine, I a mperfectly free from sciatica, lumbago and arthri- tis,” says Mrs. Robert R. Jones, 239 Frost Road, Waterbury, Conn, “When I began taking this medi- cine, I could not tle my apron strings or put my hands behind my back. I also had rheumatism in my knees, ankles and feet, and have seen the time when it was impossi- KINNEY BIG ANN UAL ble for me to bear my welght on them. I was told that I had fallen arches, but this I doubted, because there was too much pain for that. For the past few years, it seemed to me that I tried everything for my trouble, but nothing pro- duced results until I started on NOX-RI-TIS. This medicine has made a new person of me. I don’t know that I ever had rheumatism and I have a number of my friends using it with the same good results.” Call at Miller-Hanson Drug Store, 30 Church 8t, and get the booklet, “Forms of Rheumatism.” A labora- tory expert is hem to explain NOX- RI-TIS. Men’s Lisle STOCKINGS 4 Pair For $1.00 Pure Silk Stockings 69¢c CLEARANCE SALE Friday, Saturday and Monday June 26, 27 and 29 We are offering all the newest style in Women’s Novelty Shoes, at prices helow cost. We are do- ing this in order to have the public get acquainted with our wonderful values at low prices. We are also offering Men’s and Children’s Shoes at prices that will be a surprise to all. Given York Stock cst price ever paid for a seat on'thc | New York stock exchange was es. tablished today when 8. F. Streit, rresident of the stock clearing cor. poration, ship for £116,000. The pravious rec- ord for stock exchange scats was wade in the boom market of 1920 hen two memberships were trans- ferred for $115,000 each. In disposing of his seat, Mr. Streit severs @ connection of more than u disposed of his member- | Women’s Patent PUMPS Champagne Back Reg. $1.8 $4. 29 ] quarter of a century with the stock | exchange. - He will continue, how- ever, as head of the clearing cor- poration which he was instrumental in organizing in 1920, after making a study of the clearing systems of | London stock exchange and the the itourses of Paris, Berlin and Vienna. Mr. Streit also will continue as a special partner of the stock ex- change firm of H. T. Carey & Co. CATHOLIC CONFERENCE Women in Industry and Arbitration of Labor Disputes Chief Subject Taken Up at Meeting. Chicago, June 25 (A—Women in industry and arbitration of labor dis- piutes were subjects of speakers at | today’s closing session of the Catho- lle conference on industrial jems. Restrictive {mmigraticn laws, by stting down the supply of cheap abor have seemingly Impelled In- ustry to turn more intensively to- \ard negroes, women and children, eald the Rew J. M. Cooper, D. D, washington, D. C. professor of so- clology of the Catholic University of America. In a high proportion of eases the living wage for women, he said should pow be a family living wage. He citéd census reports Indicating that one-fourth of the mowen bread winners In manufacturing cities were mothers, one-fourth {n familles with no men wage earnérs, and about one fitth the sole wage earners, prob- | \\'omen's Patent Champagne PUMPS Reg. $4.98 At SCOUT SHOES Rubber Heels Growing Girls’ TAN PUMPS Low Heels Reg. 53 49 At . Trimmed With Buckles $4.29 - $2 79 \\ omen’s Light Tan PUMPS Cuban and Low Heels Reg. $3.98 $ 3( 59 Aty Men’s WORK SHOES Goodyear Welt Rubber Heels | | Children’s WHITE PUMPS Sizes 6 to 11 49c ; $2.98 Women's Felt SLIPPERS In All Colors And Sizes 69c Women’s White CANVAS OXFORDS Low Heels 89c¢ Boys’ TENNIS SHOES White and Brown 98¢ 300 Pairs of Women’s SATIN PUMPS Reg. 34 98 $4 29 VAL 47 Pairs of Women's | TAN PUMPS In Gore Styles Reg. $4.98 $ 4 29 COME EARLY AND AVOID .THE RUSH ovER 200 FAMILY STORES G-R-KINNEY CO.Irc. . Men’s Tan and Black DRESS OXFORDS Reg. $3.98 $3( l 9 Men’s Black and Tan Goodyear Welt HIGH SHOES 1 $2.98 Growing Girls’ Colored SANDALS In All Sizes 12" $1.50 At Children’s STOCKINGS 4 Pairs For $1.00 Ints, By thh 4o 13 clear, 1 dver hear of STEWART | evice Writer | Waghington, June 24.—This is a| hard “one. Unless the reader 1g deeply learned, as I'm not, he Acver'll be able to grasp its fine broad general prin- pi? Not ainter's pl. Pi——16th letter in the ock alphabet. Higher mathe- matically, *;m. know 1 you're up on such stull pi is used to denote the ratio of a cirele's circumference to its diameter, Tt starts with 3 and ends with an infinity—literally so— of decimals. The dictionary runs it up to 3.141 and then stops, out of breath, To sclentfsts the impossibllity of |arrivals, in ghis life, at the final | dectmal 18 an infcrnal nuisance. | It prevents the solving of certain riddle, - like squaring the clrcle which it's every mathematician's burning ambition to find the an- swer fo, Well, speaking of freak laws, Prof. Fisher, the political economist has dug up the fact that a Tennes see leglslator once tried to help ence out of this dificulty—by r:lnlum He introduced a bill to make pi stand for 3 flat, Compared with anti-evolutionary epactments, what do you know pie or gbout that? | | % Scenes From The Spectacular Performance Staged By The Bennett Motor Sales Co. At Walnut Hill Park Last Night Where Thousands Were Intro-' duced To The New Chrysler Four THE Motor Sales Co., were snapped, left t of Hartford. A Snap before the event at the Pi ho fump. ture shows or his was with 1y a small part |and some {To i | 118 very John I?ublckl. Salesman; Bernard Eg Jumper: T. H. Bennett, head of the Bennett Motor Sales Co., and Arthur Neilson of John P. Nellson and Sons ad the world in popularity, | Practically nohody 1s perfectly bl-lingual. This is very noticeable in Washington, with its large assort | ment of forelgn diplomats—highly | educated, especlally in the languages of them even longer prac- ticed In glish than in their na tive tongues, Dut they started with the latter and what they started with 1s what sticks, They may fool you for awhile, ooner or later | some little mistaken in- terpretation of meaning 8 em but accent of a away. .. 1¢ . ing it's dificult natur in two languages. ate: Connected with one of atin . American legations here secretary whose conversational 1glish is as fluent ana accurate | a8 any American's but he writes it | a triflc stiltedly. One day it occurreq | to me to a © of his legation | mates w I).Al Ms chap's Spanish was like, “Oh," sald the latter, “it's as good as you can expect from any- body who knows English so well.” | That's it. Either one language has| a slight edge on the other or neither | is quite right, . to than anyth write 11 the The Latin, particularly the Span- | lard, has the strange delusion that his language is very rich and Lng-‘ poor. “We have a word | for everything" as one Spanish HEADLINERS IN LAST NIGHTS ‘Thousands surrounded one of the New Chrysler Fours, blotting it from sight as the officlals of the Bennett 01 nton, Salesman; STRING OF new Chrysle ex rs now being event of its kind eve p art of the Park Ph Thomas O'Brien, speaking diplomat there explained to me, “but in English you have to use combinations to them to make yourself clear.” The mere fact thak ‘Ih: English dictionary contains at least 30 per cent more words than any Latin tongues isn't recognized as counting for a thing—except, if you do prove your case too overs whelmingly, you're very apt to loss the Latin friend you've proved it tos Pronunclation will work wonders with a word, The O-fahr-rall—pro- nounced with the r's strongly rolled and the accent on the last syllable —family frequently has a visiting member in Washington from Spain, On the hotel register he signs it O'Farrel. One of the Latin Ameri- an attaches I know, a great movie a lot to say about Noarma Tahl-mahd-kay—accent on the sec- ond syllable—but it wasn't until he howed it to me in print that I realized he meant Norma Talmad, Once I saw “coqtels” on the wine ist in a Darcelona hotel and whon I ordered a Martini seco, or dry, I found I'd guessed right, Personals E. I'. Bradley of 76 Cherry streef has left for Oak Bluffs, Mass., on & week's vacation, J. E. Erwin of 676 Main street 18 at Sound View for one week, Physical Director George M. Cas« sidy of New Britain high school will leave this week for Poultney, Vt., to spend the summer at his home. President A. J, Sloper of the New Britain National bank leaves today for Greenville, Me,, where he wiil remain for the cntln summer, THRILLER 7 | Salesman; Gusd Graf, Parachute BEAUTIES hit r staged in New Britain. This ple= otos by Johnson & Peterson Btudiey e ——— gl