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13 SCHOLARSHIP GRLS GUESTS AT SOCIAL Gollege Club Entertains Misses| Doane, Murphy and Benjamin | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1925, under the United itgs. He had control of the four gher chlefs, Misa, Tufele, Tulolo- segn and A Upon the king's death, Tufele was chosen to succeed | him, being eredited with having been the most faithful to the United States during the political trouble in | American Samoa. His son, Faatola Tufele, was sent to Huwall by the government to be educated in Amer- lean life. An athleto of more than s : orgla kuown wa clay eaters? ordinary ability, he rowed several . . . Ac Yoa. Thereture p o T e £ {a who cu! clay and mud, knowh as peared several times as an i boxer, When the elder Tufel eral plano selections were rendered It by Miss llga Harvey, |y The three honor guests received | many useful and appropriate gifts to | carry to college | Winconsin lave passed honus laws, [ 4l are now paving bonuses. In| call lettors and by whom are these ¢ of the other states laws passed | letters supplied ? ed unconstitutia A, All radio transmitters have call lettors, letters consisting of two,three or four letters and numerals. The government assigns call letters at the time tho station license is'granted. Q, After what was the state of Colorado numed and what 1s the meuning of the word? Q. Do all radio transmitters have Q. How are peach trecs started T from the seed? ‘ A. Nurseyrmen in growing peach trees from the seed, place the seed or stone In sand and allow it during the winter, wnsend, Wash,, Bept, 12— (#) — Mr. und Mrs. Charles Doug- |tass Johnson of this clty haye no to | difficulty in remembering the b= ~- This| days of their threw children. ¥y cra s the heavy covering. In the|njee Marian, the, eldest. was bt spring they are planted In cold| May 6, 1020, and threc years later frames, and are transplanted to open | seth Julla made her appear- ground in the summer after the ance on the same date, Little Olive seedlings have developed thelr fivst| Nona kept up the family regularity A. Colorado is a Spanish pame| pair of leaves. ‘;‘\ to birthdays by arriving on May meaning “bloody" or “blood red." Q. 6 this year, The Colorado r was so named because of the red color of the earth with them, Miss ires or popular referendums. In me other states provisions for land | tlements and home bullding have n made in place of the bonus. ‘ Manua group | Q. 18 there a class of people in How long Is a fortnight? weeks or fourteen days. icophagiste. St What 1is done finally with! The New Bri College club en- | QW do 8¢ at ? Reno, V., cepte 12, — Twenty (ertalned yesterday afternoon at the home of Miss Louise H. Nobi (axington strect, with a | ROVAL LINE OF MURPHY hower for Miss Alice Murphy, Miss Helena L, Doane and Miss Al AR njamin who were given the )'s scholarship this year MISS HELENA L. DOANE I, Chase poured af the attractive tea table, Assisting. Miss Noble as hostes Anstin L. Stowell, Mrs Mrs. Frederick T and Mre. Dansins A Johnston, Mrs. C| cs | [Faatola was chosen to suc r as the native ruler of Manua. ¢ home of Mrs. Ross in Hono- lulu was the center of Samoan ac- tivities in H . Here the trans: planted uatives of the South Sea islands gathered, mostly from the | ‘.\lnrmhn settlement at Lale, revived | their native customs and held their | e lebrations. SCHOOL SYSTEM 12 (®) —Alte IRISH CHAN Dublin, Sept. of the entir education sy the Trish State fu order that Irish eventually would become the spoken language of the country, is a plan which Prof. John Macneill, minister of education, has in mind. He referred to this intention re- cently while addressing teachers at- | tending Irish classes at Kilkee, Clare, saying the proposed changes would effect all educational institu- tions from primary schools to uni- | versities, MISS ABESHAG BENJAMIN | Murphy | Universit today for A Miss Doane and Miss Mon¢ for New for Women in New ¢ Jersey 3oston Heads. Veterans SAMOA EXTINGT (Princess Siupolo Tuiman, Last of Ruling Race, Dics | Honoluu, 12 P—In a| modest bungalow in the unpreten- | tious residential section of Kalihi in Honolulu the death occur ll--‘ | cently of the Sumoan princess | | Siupolo Tuimanua (Mre H. A. Sept | Ross). She was the only daughter | of the late King Tuimanua and the | 1ast of the royal line which had. ruled the little jsland kingdom for generations until 1900, King Tuimanua abdicated when ded the islands to the United States in the first war of this een- | tury. Tn Mrs. Ros sc was | a letter signed by the late President | Roosevelt thanking the king for his action. On the death of her father in 1908, Princess Siupofo was adopted by Governor Stearns, the American Iministrator of Manua, and Mrs. Stearns, Wh was 18 years | old the prines met 1Ross, chief | | petty officer in fhe United States | na and they were m d at the | Colonel of the governor. Ross was| Ola., is | transferred in 1923 to Honolulu and \ccompunied by his wife and he ce 1 she P. J. Hurley of Tulsa, the new natinoal com- nder of the Veterans of Foreign ars, elected at the national con- tour children vention at Tulsa, He has been a 1900 to 1908, King Tui- {coal mine boy. cowb manna served as native ruler of the banker, soldier and oil ope UR Indu ideal ipvestme W \nch ¥yo ‘,“\_\\m‘:nl‘? value. They € small amounts wh ot ‘1‘.11‘»1\ to es of Dcposit are an sirial Certifica e mpurar\\) \d‘.c nt for funds te ; i notice- ; wish to keep available at short '\ S <o interest from the day 370 awal Unlike many . Certificates pay withdr: s fluctuation 1 the “3} of < no danger of d for investin, pcriod of time. e g large of =4 an be use 1. for a long or short i is cone s in this ¢ your spareé fund 4 nent? form of investH F\;\cr y not o Pwfi\aN“ {ssued in amounts of A. Very young seals, for the three months or s0 nurse from mother's br from the par 1k from a bottle, | upon the kind of scal that you QUESTIONES ANSWERED You can gel an answer to any question of tact or information by writing to the Question ditor, New | s to what it should be fed. The Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, that are tound off California anc 322 New York avenue, Washington, | ¢ D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps fsh for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be glven, nor can ex-| tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All confidential.—Editor. Thost kan waters e Q. What w Cain as me ment? | death? letters arc! A, It is not known just ex at the account of the mark in means. Various a branding, a wrinkles and the disto face which crime brings. But the Revised Ve the Bible transl C ‘appointed a mark for Cain thal | reminder of his crime.”” All th | known of Cain ie given in the fo small fish. the mark put ned in the Old T What was the Q. How many motor buscs use as common carriers? A of these operated by the ¢ ways? most ctric rail- A. The number of “common « rlers” buses now in use exceed 000, of which only operated by electric the surprising number of schools { recorded. Q. Is it correct for a young man| Q. Is platinum the hardest r accompanying two ladies to walk on | known? the outside the curb, or| A, Platinum s not the sen them? rect for a man | soft metal being to walk next to t curb whether he | copper 18 with one or two ladics’ | Q. How many s of land Q. How many states have passed|there in the United States sui a state bonus for men who seried in| for cutting into lumber? the World War? A. There are approximately A. Thinois, lowa, 000,000 g f virgin timber Massachusetts, Mic . able for cutting into lumber, ouri, New Hampshire, New Jer- of sey, New York, North Oregon, Rhode Island, kota, Vermont, ha about as har Kansas. Maine, Ohio, | suitable for that purpose and South Da- | 000,00 Washington and | cord ence posts, ties, ete. new A new-day automobile. A time in history! Here are the high-spots. Con- sider them. Check them, point for point, with any car you know that sells anywhere near this price range. Then ask yourself— “Inwhat other light-car can I hope for anything even approximating this phenomenal $595 value?’’ a full-size, 5-passenger Sedan with room and to spare for 5 regular people to ride in ... a smartly-de- signed car, clean-cut, rakish, low, extraordinarily good-looking!. . body finished in polished lacquer, rich deep blue with glistening jet-black trimmings, as handsome a light, automobile asanybody ever looked at. e 5, $1,000 and ««« @ 27-horsepower engine, sturdy, fast, reliable, powerful. A ncble hill- climber. A quieter engine because it has fewer working parts. 20-to-25 miles to the gallon, often more— light on oil—hundreds of Overland ts, and 1f Laken away it requires to be fed| ter it depends | st a little further north cat shell- t come from the Alas- cause of, his| ion of ! nesls 4:15—| y | chapter of Genesis, His death is not| | metal known. It is a comparatively growing timber| 8 of timber suitable for! along its canyon, The state wus named from the river, Q. Who first sald “Know thyselt?"| A A. This is attributed to both So- crates an nophon, and alse oc- have| curs In Pope's Eesay on Man In the following lines: “Know thyself, presume not God to scan, he proper man." | Q. What 1s the longest drive ever, made in golf and by whom? | ings, Colorado, | ane drove a golf ball rds, and claimed a world's rec- . Bliss is credited with th cdn- | authenticated drive—4 sear, | made August, 1913, at Herne | riion | g o { often the men who helped | Westinghouse to get his invention of | the air brake on the market? ! A. Robert Pitcalrn, the local su-| perintendent of the Pennsylvania | road, was the man who offered | the greatest encouragement to the! | young Westinghouse in regard to his| metal | invention, the air brake. Pitcairn} | wished his road to place a train of | cars at the disposal of the inventor| for a public demonstration, but he| | could not persuade the official | above him to bear the expense. ventually W. W. Card persuaded | the Panhandle Rallroad to furnish | Westing! with a train of c provided Westinghouse would equip | | them himself. The demonstration proved successful. Shortly after, in | 1869, a company was organized to| manufacture the air brakes and all| of the principal railroads began rap-| Jdiy to install them. | first their e seals 1 the study of mankind ls upon | esta- | actly God tisal at is ourth rdest are table 142,-| | Such was the President’s order. RESULT? light-car classic. A car- of-morrow at a price unbelievable until foday. A full-size 5-passenger Sedan, with sliding-gear transmission, for less than $600—for the first owners report as high as 15,000 miles without a dollar spent for engine up-keep! Three-speed, selective sliding-gear transmission—at the lowest price ever available in a Sedan! Borg and Beck disc-type clutch—one of the finest clutches made and used in many of the highest priced cars in this country; Auto-Lite starting, lighting and ignition—again, stand- ard big-car equipment; a rear axle system the equal in size and weight to that used in cars carrying double the weight of this one; Asle shafts of Molybdenum steel, the toughest steel known. Ir the entire three years in which Overland has used this axle system there is no case on record where an axle shaft has ever been broken! Chassis—a strong, rigid frame with plenty of bracing; springs of Chrome Vanadiumsteel, the finest and strong- money sent to the Dead Letter Of- fice in undelivered mail? It is held in that office for one ar and then turned over to y Department, Q. How many words are In English language A. Approximately 700,000, on College highway, 13 mile from Southington, near Oak Hill cemetery g ity resident, Willys-Overland, Inc. ‘wmm pelicans sfrom the breeding | grounds on Anaho Islands in Pyra- mid luke, Nevada, are to be shipped soon to Ihe National Zoological park in Washington, D. C. Young | peticans which have just gradiated thel from fuzz to teathers, but which | are still unable to fly, will be se- | tectea. the It still un- | Elberta Peaches Now Ready at Elijah Rogers’ /B Roadside stand located | Orchards located near Shuttle Meadow reser- voir, Southington. Tel- ephone 1224-12, New Britain division every one of these ealures inchided! 8598 4. 0. b. Toledo Estre big doors —extra wide, easy entrance 2nd exit to both front and rear seats. Fach door has fonr heavy hirges—treat them as reugh e you ke, they are built to stand punishment! Wider front seats —the widest of any light cor built! Naw cin- glo-plecs, undivided front sea, 39 inches wide, 19 inches deep. 7 . Wider baci: seat ~A45 inches wide, 18 inches deep. You know what such ample seating capacity #neans to the comfort and pleagure of your passengers. Big, wide windows more than 20 square feet of window space— all the and all the broud, vainterrunted vision of a touring car with ciesed-car protec- tion, closed-car snugness, closed-car warmth and comfort whenever you want it! Latest one-piece windshield —especially valuable in night-driving. Gires clear, uno ucted vision, ily ude justed—you don’t have t freatly to the car's anp clean and to clean, ¥ car festure and, ia this ex value, you get it} est spring steel known to engineering —in this new-day car every leaf in each spring is genuine Chrome Van- adium, exactly the szine material you will find in the world’s finest automobiles! Compare this $595 Overland master- piece with any other light-car on today’s market. We challenge any owner in America to point put where- in it can be duplicated for quality or for up-to-the-minute equipment, or " for dollar-for-dollar value. Step in and see this car. Stand be- side it, note the beauty of it. Examine it from stem to stern—observe the completeness of it. Ride in it— know the comfert of it. Drive it yourself —feel the ease of it, the power in it. Easy Terms. Only a small amount down. 52 weeks for the balance. Trade in your present car as part) payment. siniot QVERLAN R. C. RUDOLPH 127 Cherry Street P LN R