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e et ey et e B g S e e 2 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1925 -~ ALLING RUBBER CO. SPECIAL FALL Automobile Accessory Sale WINDSHIELD WIPERS ................. 49c STEP MATS ....ccovviivennnianneinnnsass 19¢, 65¢, 75¢ Ai C. TITAN SPARK PLUGS .................... 69c/LYON BUMPERS .............oovvivvvvinneen.. $5.00 MOBILOIL—1 Gal. Cans ..........oooovveennne.. $1.00(8150 STEERING WHEEL COVERS ............ $119 NOBLE'S POLISH—T5¢ Size .............. 59¢ 5 Ib, BUCKEYE SOAP—Reg. $1.50 ................ $1.00° JOHNSON’S CARBON REMOVER .............. $1.00 (60c BRILLIANT LUSTRE ... OO0 OO SIMONIZE POLISH AND WAX—Each .... 15¢181.00 LEATHER TOP DRESSING ................ 9% 0 ASH TRAYS 59¢|SINGLE CAMP COTS ..... . $3.50 f)P \I OR CLOSED MIRRORS ........... 75¢|POLBERTH AUTOMATIC CLEANERS ....... $5.25 PERFECTION AUTOMATIC CLEANERS ....... $2.69($3.00 ADJUSTO LITE ........................... §2.25 0.00 MOTO’\IETERS §7.50 HYDROMETERS R ate §7.50 MOTOMETERS $5.60 | . §1.00, $1.89 $3.50 MOTOMETE $2.60 |LIQUID X RADIATOR CEMENT . 59¢ MANY OTHER VALUES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION 240 Main St. 240 Main St. Exceptional Values in Portage Cord Tires $ 9.00 §14.40 $§15.50 $17.10 $17.70 $18.30 $22.20 §23.10 $24.10 §25.10 $30.60 §32.70 10\3‘ J-xl'g ;X4Ig x4 35x4', 33x5 .m\n % OFF ON ALL OTHER TIRES AND TUBES 10% ALL OTHER TIRES AND TUBES 240 Main St, New Britain DOUBLE SUICIDE OFFLDERLY COUPLE Brooklyn Carpenter and Wile 5 i Found Dead : New York. Sept. 1—Offictally of Nils Andersen sea gateway. This little port town with its 5000 inhabitants is built along the side of hills, Most of its streets are steep, Over the hills to |Christchurch lead a bridle path and a carriage road for those who spurn | t WHATSALORSSAW Christ Church and Dunedin Are!, "2 s i | il by its Church of England ori- i 8 Ty n's mmm;»"na is that of Britain in Miniature ~ [8eoien precistcrinmiem. e tourth ¥ of the dominion, I¥ing near the son!hern end of South Island, has a Waehington, D. ¢, Sept. 1—-|Population in the neighborhaod ‘of | Christchurch and Dunedin, citiesbor | 19.000. Tt was founded in 1845 by | the South Island of New Z ,|settlers from Edinburgh, who, to| where sailors from units of |aveid adding raphic confu- American fleet have been visiting, |Sion, gave it lic name for are the subjects of the following |the Scotch capital otch names bulletin from the Washington, D, C., |Prédominate in the felephone direet- headquarters of the National Geo- |OFY: on the business and in graphic society. the designations of the streets, whil “Christchurch ltes in Canterbury [the massive Kirk with its towering Plains on the River Avon steeple stands in place af Christ- existence of such a bureau would in | | itselt prevent error from occurring ! first instance, provide for its tion if it did occur, and avoid etition The modern newspaper is keen all news. There s much news, much interosting news in liti gated cases, more than the publie is aware But if the lawyer h to the attention of | ha is open to the charge! husiness it s (0 seo | of self-exp 1f, however, his its sta case be ona of real interest or mo-| assoeiati his bar association can I its ewn bureau, bring it to o att .‘,‘.m,flfly‘m.’tll;{ :.::‘f ‘.‘-,m entifically perfected; insures clear, oprieties can be observed, yet the church, theater and radio; . $ be yburs, THE LITTLE GEM EAR PHONE won the GOLD MEDAL 1t Panama-Pacific Exposition, Its superior qualities are still nged. By recent improvements it embodies all the ry features to the highest degree of perfection. Ex- tremely small size, light weight, perfection of tone, entire the formation of supporting opinion, public the epeaker continued “The modern newspaper has many the changes |« taking place from day to day kaleidoscople, that no newspaper. no tar how well informed or hov ized, can keep abr dotivities of 11 LONDON STREET FATALIT[ES' GROW MORE NUMEROUS| RADIO PRINCIPLES BRING Perfect Hearing for the —DEAF THE WONDER OF THE AGE THE LITTLE GEM EAR PHONE positive hearing at All these pleasures can 50 flelds to cover, are so During Three Months of Year 226 for news- bar assoc country unlaes those s [are hmugm to its attention |state bar aseociatitn should h committes that the pre fully informed of of. -The streets of London are getting more dan - {ous if the quarterly statement of thy the {number of deaths from accidents is- and his sued by the commissioner of police fe, Nellie, were caused by gas|is any criterion. During April, May | asphyxiation. Also after investiga- ;m\vj June this' year 228 people were tion the police declared that there [killed or died from injuries received was nothing suspicious—obyviously 4 (in street aceidents. double suicide, | This death-roll is higher [ Mary Davidson, living nest door. ithan that fer the previous smelled gas around the Andersens’|yonths, The total number of street home, a4 two-story house at 1201 \aecidents during the quarter was a A the pres wihe itatiot Kept 51 tivities The suggestion racently mad Don C. Stz of the New Yowk We association th home, that in e Cohen reviawed tha progress its re- efforts Jrds of by 41| three ) profession burean co public, the correct information regavding pe create and maintain stand issues invelved 1o f England in Miniature “These three names alone would give one a good inkling of what Christchurch s like and something of {ts history. 1t was founded just i5 years ago almost, directly as a project of the Clurch of England, and the communit, was meant to be an ‘England in miniature’ An archbishep of the Church of Eng- land headed the settlers, most of whom were staunch churchmen, cultured and reasonably well to do. An imposing cathedral was built to bethe ‘hub’ of the town both physi- cally and spiritually, and it domi- nates the city in both realms today. % “In its 75 years Christchurch and ‘itg suburbs have acquired a popu. Jlation of about 95,000 The_ ci spreads o er a considerable area. al- most wholly flat, and has wide, tree shaded streets, uncrowded dwellings, ampls parke. ! : Center of Grain, Sheep and Dairy Industries “Canterbury Plains, on ths edge of which Christchurch Hee, have an area of about 4,000 square miles and constituts the largest unbroken traetd of agricultural land, and the rvichegt in ‘the two islands. Here is the center ef New Zealand's grain op and dairy industries. Can- bury plainsmen aie progperous and the roads of their large level reglon invite motering—tacts which have contributed to make automs- |’ biles as numerous in Christchurch as in almost any American city of similar size. “One of the most charming fea- tures of Christchurch is. the Aven, a Mmpid little stream which winds its way through the heart of the ety Its gently sloping, grassy hanks are overhung by weeping w! lowg whose trailing branches m oft walls of green for every vista of the stream. At several places the Avon widens to enfold little islands on which landscape gardeners have maseed graceful shrubs and flowers, Behind Hills From Sea "Christchurch is the enly-one. of . . the four N Zealand cities visited by the American sailors"which ‘lies Between it and the lies- & -range of The hills have nel for a rail- inland. seven miles away, high churc ch's ca i T ¢ | 630 street. Brooklyn, yesterday 12, pared with 17.510 during hears inexplicably weird noises [aféund the corner in Dunedin they | probably emanate from cng of the city's bag-pipe bands. Hill Country Like Scotland's “The back country, a bit rugged and cooler than the rest of Ne Zealand. is also reminiscent of Scot- land. The climate is milder, how- ever, than' that of the Caledonian | Hills; and the région is a great fruit country as well as a rival of Canter- production. . “Duredin has a good. well pro- tected ‘harbor, thongh it is neitl 80 large nor so deep as the harb of Auckland and Wellingten. From this port in 1881 sailed the first cargo of frozen mutton, an that marked the business that has developed into ohé of ‘the ef economic bulwarks of the Dominion thousands of frozen carcas: |shipped out annually now. from Dunedin, but from a number of other ports. The mutton car- |casses from Dunedin supple mented now by countless frozen rah- | bits. “Dunedin nestles among its en- circling ‘hills and around its.curved |harbor like a small scale Welll ltoh;” They are greener, less gashed. hills, however, and not so steep “Dunedin gets its share of pléas- ure seekers from the warmer, more forthern parts of New Zealand. Tt {s the gateway to the southern lake country. a popular New Zealand {playground, and to the great Fiord- {land National Park frent not only PASSES BAR EXAMINATION Alfred Paonessa, a nephew Mavor A. M. Paonessa, has passed the bar of California and has been admit- ted to \!m practice of law in that state. F E | Attor this city. of who is now on a visit here " TAX COLLECTIONS UP A slight increase in tax collections last month over those of 3924, is Indicated in the monthly re- Those of August, 1324 5 and thoee of last month SAVINGS DEPOSITS made here on or before bury Plains in dairying and sheep | beginning of a| examinations of the state; August. | port of Collector Bernadotte Loomis | the traveler | | morning \\n‘ notiticd a patrolinan | trom the t Hamtén station, who! | broke into the house and found An-| | dersen and his wife Iying on (he| | kitchen floor with'the five jets on the | | gas stove open. They had been dead | tor hours | Later Mre, Hugh Faughnan of 79| Third st + Andersen's daughter, arrived with her husband apd Pa- trolman Diemer, She had received a | letter from her father hinting he was about to take his life. ‘“Take| care of mama,” the letter said. An- other daughter, Mrs. Lawrence Stro! of 3877 Bedford avenue, Brooklyn, 1eieived 3 similar letter, Both letters were dated May Andersen had probably written them that dute and had laid side for the future | Andersen was a barpenter and a | thorough craftsman who had always | ¢ 4 comfortable living working | v until Saturday. a few months 'ago he and fe had been very happy in their comfortable home with ons of their three daughters, Mrs. Helen Stroh. and her husband. Soms fam- I'ily difference led to the Strohs mov- erday the Strohe were going to k. Mr. Stroh had bought house and had notified the el. v couple of their intention to live In the interior of the comfortable lonking house all the rooms were bare —- except ene on the second floor, which contained only a bed and a chiffonier. In the kitchen, where ths bodies wers found, were the kitchen stove, an enamsled table, a chair and a few scraps of food. Also there was found a deed fogfhe hotise and a notification of another payment due an the houss Mrs. Andersen was lying in such 2 position that it is belleved she had been held in her husband’'s arms be- fore hoth fell unconscious from the gas HAS GOOD LEAD Charlotte is having a soft time of it in the South Atlantic league. It 18 now about 75 points in front anburg cond place ng clubber in in n 1e it has the | G Al SEPTEMBER 3rd bear interest trom the 1st Open Saturdays Six to Eight P. M. Standard Time them | Plyelationehip betwesn the {Janu a arterly average during 1024 of LAWYERS T010 08 NEWSPAPER VMUF Delegates Hear Talk Detroit 1 (P tions between bar associat country and the press - by Julius Hanry Cohen of as chairman Sept op: |in t! formulation of ethical |arde, in the improved machiner | sdministration of the law }msmg of standards for admission 15 |the bar, could never ha brought about except through the xcnuperaflmv of press,” said Mr. Cohen. “But the pre or. ganized as is the profe: cine, or even as our is. thoug! we have pointed out, our ewn or- ganization is still in the ma Newspaper publishers ar: man business. Newspaper editors beginning to avolve just now a form of associational activity. The seri- ous attempt made last year bring about a formal | between the two profes: 51 ful. The two not vet properly or, mal cooperation tand- in of are m ions was un- profedsions are ed for for- must be press time to come cooperation between the and |the bar. it will be cooperation of & Aifferant kind Mr tas report to be made which would | outline a plan ef be tween the two professions by closer ore: ed ach state and the nawsepapers but for soms Cohen referred to a commit- cooperation bar in ¢ of that s ‘What the bar is provement of machin stration of justice in th At iina for the y.m. titutions, for the maintenance of »Mnctsr rw i- fications for admission to th and for the disciplining of thc<> | oftend, are all matters each state bar orga the press of its sta to inferm the public tion will find too willing and to aid in and |, “The progress that has been made | s name [ts mproper loved association a there would he e infor to f p!m'uluy " Conference o B Bar Aswmtmn A n()ul‘lShl to | relationship | i Packed in two con- vewientsizes—7 and 150z. Both sizes at all druggicts Cone I spe vertisement. gal educat and rles ieted by a aking in its mission no dang newspaper v of visers, public from tncompetent for ad ta the bar that will protect legal srnment recently men for the highest The hat country HEN the heat makes you feel that vou can't eat 2 mouthful, yet you know you need nourishing food—drink a glass of Borden’s, the Improved Malted Milk. It's a wonderful lunch in hot weather, A glassful of Borden's Malted Milk has rie food value of a light meal. It is nourishing and sustaining, but not heating. More satisfying than ordi- nary malted milk, became it contains more milk. Yet it is extremely easy to assimi- late, because the casein is partially predigested. Borden's Malted Milk does not overtax the digestion. And vou'll be delighted with the flavor, for Borden's has no nauseat- ing sweetness. It appeals to the most finicky hot weather appetite. Order a package from your dealer today and make it at home for your- self and your® family. The Borden Company.BordenBldg.,350 Madison Ave., New York. THE IMPROVED © MALTED MILK_ 1 - in the square package about which | vzig meal inthis tall| |coo/glass i S HERE First of the New Models to be Shown in Connecticut THIS CAR WILL BE UNCOVERED AT 8 O’CLOCK TONIGHT Our Hartford Salesroom, 348 Trumbull Street COME EARLY AND AVOID THE RUSH ELMER AUTOMOBILE CO. “NEW BRITAIN HOME OF THE FORD" 22 MAIN ST. hould be elig- positions in | nd talegraph services in i $4.50 TEL. 1513 freedom from complications. THE AUTO EAR MASSAGE ia used to stop head nolses and makes the cure of deafness possible. RE 2 ) FREE DEMONSTRATION AT OUR STORE from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. TWednesday and Thursday, September Ind and 3rd An expert from New York City will be with us on the above days. We most earnestly request you to call,make a test privately and recejve expert advies without charg Every instrument guaran- teed. Ask or write for booklet, Tell year deaf friends, The HARVEY & LEWIS Co. 85 West Main Street, New Britain SMASH! Go Dry Cleaning Prices qfi:;:ei::d‘“’m s Suits Dry Cleaned $l 00 Ladies' Coats Dry Cleaned and $1 25 and '$125,,$1.50 Pressed ... SRS Men's Owlrnah Dy Cleaned All work called for and delivered. Garments of all deseription dry cleaned or dyed: at reasonable rates, STAR CLEANING CO. 221-235 NORTH ST. TEL, 3307-12 Branch. 203 Main St., Tel, 2884 RENIER PICKHARDT & DUNN Phone 1408-2 SEASUNS CLOSE-OUT SALE WEDNESDAY CREPE DE CHINE AND SATIN PAJAMAS, Were $12.00, CHEMISE. Regular Price $3.50 to $4.75. NIGHT ROBES, Were to $2.25. PATAMAS, Were $3.00 and $3.50. PRINCESS SLIPS, Were §1.25 and $1.50. ODD CORSETS. From $3.50 to §7.00. CHILDREN'S WHITE DRESSES, (2 to 6 years)., Were to $8.00. EXTRA SIZE DOUBLE SERVICE APRONS., Regular price $2.25, SILK AND PONGEE DRESSES, Values to $21.50. ALL WOOL JUMPER DRESSES, Were to $8.98, VOILE AND BROADCLOTH DRESSES Regular price to $7.98. STRIPED TUB SILK DRESSES: Regular price $15.00. 2 $2 -98 \‘\'NZRE\SSSI.T:\"}:%!‘TS. % $39g iy coure N §1.49 piiase, s :: $1 '00 SHIRT WAISTS. $1.00 $1.25 *$1.25 Were to $8.00. SMALL LOT OF ROMPERS AND At 2lc 10c CHILDREN'S DRESSES. Were $3.00. On 25¢ 27 Mam Street, Opposite »\nh - $1 29 LAWN Were $5.00. LEATHER VANITY BOXES, Were to $3.00. CHIFFON HOSE. Regular price $1.50 and $1.75. CHILDREN'S SHORT SLEEVE VESTS Were 29c. TABLE. Articles from 25¢ to $1,00, TABLE. On