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Ats, harbor ¢ other place us to dock, EED OF AIR FIELD SEEN IN'THIS CITY (Cemln'md From First Page) wo get, the will become, flying we more public alr aviation flelds," chandise quickest,” he added. | Reasons Points to Our Mall Needs He sald it wouldn't be long be- for New Britain would realize \l\-u"““" need of an aviation fleld, polnting |should lc out that when the alr mail line op- |an airport erates between New York and Bo » Conncctleut ton, etopping ut Hartford, an auxil- fary field fn Now would by not only a decided assei to indus- try and business In this clty, but nlso & valuable emergency landing fleld for mall pilots who might be forced down off thelr course. “And | land will never ho cheaper,” he add- ed significantly, re why 1o time ma but the taini terials ing ufactured tor. i icularly AT f \ T vital Ivery up to date community got to have an aviatlon fiel or later,” the governor “Any community as large Britain neglecting the opportunity, and not realizing that aviation going to be a great help to trans- | portation and Industry in the future Is not foresighted. No community as up to date ns New Britain can afford not to enlarge and improve an aviation field, has ; sooner | ! continued, | Ne¢ of last as traftic mbar, congestion tion first, that now al u not a dangerous our great r > most e motor nt “Every fleld we get in New Eng land 1s adding to our strategic posi- tion in the Industrial world nn.f the more we get the faster we will en- eourage aviation, Landing flelds in |y clties the size of New Britain are wid Important as a harbor to a ship. In | per fact more so because a ship missing | As must fit into h T i | advant of {the enormous « | tured goods Walk-Over*Zm-‘”f : Store News WANTED—Young men to see the “Cave-Man” Shoes in our window—underslung with broad balloon heels and made with wide roomy toes with soft tips that give it a short| "All of the : wheel base, that insures easy b “‘:‘]" Lo operation. They look like a million dollars, but the price is only 6 and 7 bucks. which the the its spes d b in | s through | eperat lan almost through whic h will al to to for tions to come, acts of = LONG WEARING SHOES FOR CHILDREN — Our chil- dren’s shoe business is by far the largest we have ever had. The reason is the long wear they give. Price §2.50 and up, according to size. Pencil case with pen, pencil and ruler with every purchase. —a— VELVET PUMPS FOR "WOMEN — Velvet shoes are . very fashionable this fall, and we have an extra fine selection in low, medium and high heels. Prices $6.00 and $7.50. 0= PEAR SHAPED HEEL — The reason Walk-Over's Pumps and Oxfords fit so well is the pear shaped heel; wide at the bottom and narrow at the top. They cling at the heel. 0 WALK-OVER RELIEF MODEL--This wonderful “IRe- lief” shoe is made extra wide at the ball of the foot, and narrow at the heel. People who ve trouble in getting , wide enough will appre “Relief.” - All come Main-Spring arch. hoes the MANNIN O/Mtfim@&%,é ) ' Shoe Store 211 MAIN You're just about 2 minutes away from break- fast when you reach for a package of New Style H-O Quick Cooking Oats. : The new cereal with the wonderful “bak; n” flavor. Toasted oat flakes that cook into granular ocatmeal. Smooth—firm in texture—neyer sticky or pasty. And healthful! A wealth of energy-building car tcs, tissue-building proteins and vitalizing minerals.arc in évery dish. That “all-night cooked” flavor in only two minutes "POR MORE THAN SOYZARS MAKERS ©F QUALITY PRODUCTS - Iy neeees n he above “The more adequate aviation fields | New Britain has made some successful The more ct the greater will b w accldents coma very few if we got satlsfe For Haste BOVernor New in gol Yankee ity and all ed from the purpos: ar goods, tion of transportation one it nsportation has been larg and owed by ns of transportation opposition cuse trucl iversally competifor stem, | ler to our h new means of our transportation eyste “Aviation has of course the proportion of our i quit greate ue of aviation (mm al unlimited operate complete o m Apply to New s in KEW BRITAIN DAHY HERALD WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1925 W Britain, t is only huuum m\lul« that It tangi- offort to assist the alr mall serv- fi that service will muke every ef- » the |fort to do somel Whing in return for in | New Britain, l‘uwm\-'l r Air Service Abroad "\We Liere In this country still Jook askance at passenger |carriers, o 18 unques- tateq | tonably partiully justified due to the Britain [1¢Sults of the haphazard methods of coutrolling of passenger carrying | plancs In this country up to the pres- a|0nt date However, it s Interesting not |10 note that Professor Edward War- New ner of the Massachusetts Institute of rest of | Technology who has just reached of ob. from a con survey of commer- 1 pa carrying lines Europe sta it people abroad ronize absolutely rellable and safe airlines with as little thought Ylof denger as we in this country would give to a ride from New Brit- to New York on a steam train, 1the u of all metal tripl planes a line in Sweden has cen operating regularly for the last four years with but one forced land- Since the first of January up to e first of July, this line car- ed 28,000 pass rs not only with- out fatality, hut on an absolutely ular and reliable schedule, with- out delays or mishaps of any kind. “It is therefore not only quite con- ceivable but very probable that in the next deeade we will find the citf- New Jngland using air mail routes, at a tariff quite within their means, for the time in from such points as New Brithin to York, Boston, Chicago, ete. “It is also worthy of careful eon- sideration that traveling by air s on | more comfortable than travel by rau | find som | flying | ble BUCE [ice, 11l have will be story | g after is of arket There- \ 1d o in thig the listory da be inven- ng transporta- at being which i acc t a8 a|zons I trunk lin senger con- | englly nation- |, m or elsc New listributing venient nobile, With these facts as a premise it evident that if New Britain mpetitor in the industrial and rercial world with other large it will be at a great disadvan- citizens of Hartford for inee can leave their offices ana Wall street in New York in the of an hour, whereas New 1 citizens will have to drive all way inte Hartford by automobile by train hefors even start- ir wostward journey. 1l known fact today that economic £ tra ny m or go in Pritain pply o ing on t Tt is n the (r North of of Ame i ¢ heen it our gr continent would olutely impossible at Intricate transpor- Morcover history al- the dawn of civilization any nation which has t enough to rule the world 1vs been one noted for the of its means of communi ican sinee s that not only and must pay fore any town, ruJ‘ airport more embargoes mnd during up shipping ter months, is no traf- short time vd stepping into a [ {color or pows v [advant | ars from now it 1 to step into an is now to get onto mmo ste a investigated poke on nker planes Holland. a number o Vaggage, and 11 only one tatality, which he | fer than raiiroad 1 to July 1, arried 2 hout even a 'Ul:\ Mo said fog or noth- them motored from & J carry pa ; ir acei nusry in New 1 by has | lritain upon TICK COOKING OATS | Cook 2109 2= | minutes only | 2= ‘ v -0 fompany ™ NEWARK, U 8. 15 % ot Nes of | passing | 1endous development of the | untit | PHONDGRAPH NOW GREATLY iMPROVED New Device Reproduces Tones and Overtones New York, Oct. 7.—~The phono- graph Industry, hard hit during the last two years by the Inroads of the adlo, has made unswer with & new style®of plionograph—the product of the finest engineering minds in the irounu-)'—:md with a new style of !vecord, and at a test before a large |audience at the Waldorf last night a furore of applause for the new invention was precipitated. On the new machine all tones and vertones which heretofore eluded reproduction upon the phgnograph lave been caught and ar® faith- fully reproduced; the large hall was | |filled with the sonorous power of the | musie, The first record was the soldlers' [chorus from Iaust, sung by forty voices, glven as loud and clear ax it the singers wers in the room. hen by way of contrast followed the finest and most expensive of the old records, a chorus of elght artist volces, The audience was thrown into u long laugh at the contrast. A piano selection played by Cor- tet-—heard through the new record on the new machine—was reproduc- ed as falthfully and with as much sonority as if the pianist were play {ing before the audience. A chorus | {by 160 voices of the Mormon tem- {ple at Salt Lake City proved a thrill- ing masterpiece of musical record- ing. In speaking of the new system, Walter W. Clark stated, referring to piano recording: “The pjano has always been an exceedingly difficult instrument to | {record and veproduce. The twang | or banjo tone of the middle and low- er register was very difticult to get | |away from, and 1t was very diffi- | lcult to obtain a clear sharp in the | upper register. 1 want you to no- [tice how these defects have heen |overcome in the new instrument.” | The new machine uses disk rec- ords like the present ones, and these |are specially made through princi- {ples perfected by the engineers of [the Western Eleetric Co. and the | Telephone Co. Although ally made for the new “ortho- type of phonographs they Lave advantage over the old records ven when ed on the old ma- . and all the new according to the new ¥e narrower grooves play longer, The many millions of ald records | {in houscholds are not scrapped b i o acht i . | he new machine, hey will yield | ’Hn'rn music for the new instruments [than they would for the old. They will not however, equal records made ‘r>|nrm1'y for the new type, which is d the Orthophonic Talking Ma- chine, The new instrument is a feat of imathematics and physics. It is not | result of innumerable experi- ments, but was worked out on paper in advance of being built n the oratory. An immense amount |caleulating was done to show jus! low each part of the Instrument h to he made to transmit sound vibr tions, or frequencies, without loss of The formulae were cers to he t was| ription o8- of 1 ovgr ta er out. The instrum ally built to il a pr the Victor and es have perfecterd tems of sound reproduction. ¢ records to be ted some | time this fall can h 1 to great | re upon the present styles nf: far the hest ef- | upon the new | compa phonographs but by s will be possible achines specially made for the new |records, | | Thé phonograph fudustry is con- fident that the new type of record- vill be able to meet radio com- on equal terms, especially | static is not conquered. | machines not only give {complete and perfect reproduetion and loud enough to till 1If desived, but vield rest |statie fnterferenc The phonograph Industry hi the new ma ceived by by officis demonstration. in | petition long The new ‘Lndzepmt Youth !e Held On Mansrau"nler Charge | Orange, Conn., ( ce Burns, Jr., ct, Bridgeport, criminally responsible for the Harold Sunden, 24, 406 Rridgeport, I 2 finding returned hound over v cl ter to the who dealh Maple- Coroner st | wocd avenue, EN Mix in , was on Jan iperior comt in New 100 of man of the under James bonds of $% den me t an automobile New Haven turnpike in ¢ September 2t which t t his deat n t which Burns permission of its Iriving is said to n without the ner, while Michael Cisero, the of the ma e riding has had his pended by the motor v ment. in which Su ME} ll\|. TONIGHT at the iSOV Ry-laws which last regular me of A, G. Ham- Camp, United Spanish War | will be acted on at a meet- | ing camp tonight at 8 o'clock | were tabled Vetera of the th | was recordings | ¢ tax returns file lab- |5 ‘,‘,,',.,,- no net incomes for the y arge | o in armory. Action will also be taken on an invitation recently 1 by » from the camp t New Haven to attend the unveil- |ing of a Spanish ial 1 city Sunday 25 It s hoped by 1l leaders that the « Hammond camp will attend t New Haven exv and take g strietly military parade whi the « part of the pr A f visitors from ¢ ynight t- re- iv th can war mem October lo i on | v wi | | | | number o end 1e HALL \\\ \RDI l‘ CONTRACT., and a awarded last mission to W. cessory grading we ht by the park co H. Hall for $3,715. ESpemaI | | E | | CONNECTICUT PEOPLE PAID ELEVEN MILLION IN PERSONAL INCOME TAX And sm{c?zérporafions‘gug DAY CAMPAIGN FOR HOSPITAL MEMBERSHIPS Contributed More Than 13 Million More to Uncle Sam’s Support — 6,705 |Solicitors Chosen for Posts Around New Britainites File Re-| ©itv tn Annual Drive for Support. The membership committes of the turns, woman's board of New Britain Gen- . Herald) er al hospital will open early tomor- Cct. 7 P—|row a flying one-day campalgn for persons in New Bl e e et 1l Jncome tax returns | pigees where new members may of Connecticut | rogister and board members in perconG afihis tosal gpg are ns follows: Davidson & p\-rfnnflvn‘l")““_ Leventhal, Mrs. Robert Parsons; United States for | piokingon drug, Mrs. Charles Mer- 1 win; Raphael's, Mrs. Howard Par- persons - in the [g, e Bogse.Leland, Mrs. W. T. Co- oual returns (Or |y e n Roston store, Miss Mona & little more nry . Tamen A. Spinetta's, Mra, H. lvw.fi..'.;”:x . Shepard; Miller & Olson, 257 Whiting, Mrs. Louls R. Barker; Miller & Olson, 552 Arch, Mrs. Roger Whitman; West End Economy | store, Mrs. Donald Bartlett; Crow- oll's drug store, Mrs. C, F. Chas Kranowitz drug store, Mrs. Tdward Peck: Relvidere drug store, Miss Jane Wessell, Other committee members fol- low: Mrs. Leonard Fox, Mrs. B. T. Damon, Mrs. Gardner C. Weld, Miss I Leghorn, Miss K. McIntyre, Mrs. R, Graham of Kensington, Mrs. T, B. Stone, Mrs. §. Shurberg, Mrs, Henry Trumbull of Plainville, Mrs, c inerd, Mrs. H. C. Kingslay, Mrs. E. M. Pratt, Mrs. A. A. Pinkus, Mrs Rackliffe, Mrs. Alfred Hick, Mre. W. L. Rell, Mrs. €. H. Mitchell, Mra. Frank Shield, Mrs. A. Leventhal, Mrs. A. Rickey of With 6,705 filing perso last year, the uted 1. amount collected i tax returns in the the calendar year The number stato who filed pe the year was 149 than ten per cent of t ulation asstimate the ce State o state d by the July 1, 19 Hartford County. In Hartford County, there 46,144 citizens who persol income tax returns to the federal government, Of these, 42,711 report- ed fncomes for the year under § 1.947 reported incomes between five and ten thousand dol and 1,426 had incomes excceding $10,- 000, Connecticut re $11, 184 taxes to th for the y reports r 9 nsus for were sidents paid a total in personal income States tre r 1923, The net incomes by citizens of the cd an aggregate of §$47 . which was 1.91 per cent of the total income reported for citi the whole United States. Average Income. In Connecticut, the avera income for each citizen in 19 cording to personal returns, w Sl 162.49, and come tax paid in th $74 Due to reduction tax rates coffected by last year, the total Connecticut in inc 1923 1 14.71 the amount coll bt substz o asury eny of OFFERS HIS BLOOD the 50 ress early contributed hy income Fverett Thiet Ready To To Life and Hcalth, droppe per ce ~eted for 19 under rett, Mass,, Oct. 7 (P—A po- th in the made tax returns, fnec miohile thief and jail breaker, a k ago last night, his Llood in an e of Bennett, when the call went out from Whidden hospital where nnett has been under treatmena | g shooting that blood trans- fusion was his one hope for trolman Felix Dumas was one nf the rome first to volunteer. last | After tests policeman was placed second on the list of eligibles | and Blythe of Chelsea was se- ted for the operation. Late last Tennet had overy. nnett had heen sought hy police ngland elties since his es- months ago from the » Sate prison at Thomasten, where he was serving a term for heft of an antomobile. He was shot | Dums atiempted to es- - MOTHER! me, the Heads OF Familics 149.520 personal | . 8,164 were by men who These men > net income a total in tax- ads of familles to the number of 57 filed returns in the sta rorting net incomes 655,101, and paving $1 who filed returns, numb: reported incomes totalin nd pald § 13 in 359 wives made se from their husbands, r 49,952 in incomes, and pay es totuling 567,986, Al oth en in t filing returns bered 17,775, and had net aggregating $5 taxes tota the madc Jesse of s when he tax arate porti r wo ).211 by net income am §28, and the ta 5,321, According to t} of the Burcan of It there were three residents necticut who had net ir than a million doll ¢ incomes for the | 1 $500,000; e Depencable Laxative for Sick | ot Babe or Child incom ternal venue, | of Con- mes of | ore ars in 1923 I'welve per ar hetween and 63 reporte $100,000 and umber to $2,000 iy addition to t1 paid in persor s in Conneeticnt, ate paid a aking the total cont state for 19 in i There gons | 50,000 an in comes s in the s ouped in the corporati ibution of Tongue if Bilious, Constipated Shows 10 $24,382,020 orporations in th d net inc e Even a fretful, ious or constipated child [ Three Kiiled When Auto Runs Into Railread ’1 rain Raltimore, Uy for geunuine p" which has and children on hottle. “Californ imitation ftig babies ages printed You must say get divcetions for all Mot ! or you may hue an MOORE BROS | SAZITARY FisH MARKET ls the Place To Select Your Sea Food N LARGE l’i(!.\ll-) SOFT SHELL CRABS LARGE DEEP SEA SCALLOPS LIVE AND BOILED LOBSTER LIVE AND BOILED SHRIMP BLOCK ISLAND SWORDFISH Shore Haddock, Large Weakfish, Fancy Block Island Codfish, Native Eels, Fancy Boston Bluefish, Elegant Fresh Salmon, Fancy Cape Butterfish, Fancy Large Flounder Large and Small Silver Bass, Large Porgies, Large and Small Fresh Mackerel, Large Croakers, Large and Small Sea Trout, Block Island Bluefish, Round and Long Clams, Little Neck Clams for half shell. Salt Cod 18c pound, 2 for 50c. Oyster season is now opened. We have the Indian Neck and Marland Oyst On sale at all times. Elegant 30 COMMERCIAL STREET TELEPHONE 1199 Open Until 9 P, M. Thursday “California. Fig Syrup” | Policeman Who Shot Anto | Assist Him Back | | | | an who shot James E. Bennett, | offered to give | ort to save the lifo | | Rich in Fragrance lcape from a stolen ear guised in women’'s clothing and his | identity became known only after e had been taken to the hospital, Pearsall Becomes Supt. Thompsonville, Conn,, Oct.'9 (A — W. P, Pearsall, for 15 years \\]lh the carpet firm of ) |Sons of Worcester, Mass., ,mm m beeame "SALADA" T E A has a flavor unsurpnued. Fresh, pure & satisfying. Try it. Black, Green or Mixed Blends. here dis- | Hartford C: arpet company, B. 1. Connolly, who has been acte Ing superintendent since the resign: tion a few weeks ago of John W. Plerce, who had been superintendent for seven years has been appointed to the newly created position ef manager of plants which includes factories in Thompsonville and Clin- ton, Mass. His headquarters will be |ia Thompsonville, Of Carpet Factory J. Whittal superintendent at the| The sun never sets on Herald Thompsonville plant of the Bigelow- “\""n\“r“ 1 results! FOR. Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Do Colds Pain Neuritis Toothache Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART, Accept only ‘“Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Asplrin i the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salléylicactd C hase:Glootty fimnyourcfiom.! Moore Bros. Fish Market || Morgan, LD MAN GLOOM” when the mirror in the hall beams blue and gold—when the woodwork in the living room lustres with delight—when the old chair in the bedroom glistens a lovely sea green. Devoe Mirolac Enamel did it alll quickly disappears Sixteen artistic Mirrolac Enamel colors to choose from. All easy to apply. And Jjust think of the thrill of seeing a gloomy piece of furniture emerge spry and bright from under the touch of your magic brush. When you want to know anything about paint or painting drop in and discuss your problems with us Kingsley & Thompson 411 Main Street Consultny. ab\ou't 'the Devoe mpr(;vement enables you to Hnmc inside aatj out- fiay for it 1nal Cayments)