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MARSAY Brand COFFEE Special Blend 49¢ DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN 81, Wide Shoulders— The most admired style feature ever deyveloped m mén's attire, Wide shoulders have always been the pride 6f man—and now every man can thgow forth his chest in pride—for the nsw Fall models— without exception—carry a man- 1y breadth of shoulder brawn H"s.uvz.fflshn-n for Fall The coat tapers down to narrow hips—then start the trousers—as wide ‘aé 24 incheé at the bottom or ‘ag narrow as you ke them. Wide shoulders are being fea- tufed in these Horsfall made sufts and they absolutely $45 . $50 Men's Sults With Extra Trousers— Hrym aw Excellent Manyfdctorer . $3850 ORSFALLS ‘~ ~99 Msylum i “it Pays"to Bay Our Kind® = J. D:'DONAHUE Veoice Culture lented Tuesdnys wd Erldays om 2 p.m. to 9 p.om. Studio 515-3. Volges Kes, New Cold Cream Powder Stays On Until You Take It Off! Perspiration, even, won't affect it ~—won't come -through and ugly. shine! 1t spreads evenly, Eannol be detected from the s puits.any complexion, for it avith the natursl coloring and i the pores Inyisible wondorful Leauty Mello-glo and fry it #tore Raplucl's de an and <kin tones in Get 1his powder AMES BODY FOUND, -~ HILLED IN"FALL (Long Lost Mail Fler Met Death in Fatal Plunge Bellefonte, Pa, Oct. 12 (M—Aan- |other casualty added to the long list of men who have glven their lives to the advancement of the postal air | service, the remains of Charles H. duty when his mail plane crashed Into the side of Nittany mountain vealed only yesterday, repose today [in a 1t Bellefonte undertaking | establishment On the night of October 1, Pilot Ames left New York with westbound mail but he never completed the trip. Next morning he was missing and scarch was staried, the quest be- |coming mare intense as days passed without Inkling of his fate, until | yesterday when the plane, with the {body of Ames in the cockpit, wi |tound by a hoy on the side of the mountain. An inquiry is scheduled for today. That he met instant death is the beliet of air mail officials, includ- ling Carl F. Egge, general superin- tendent of the service, who directed the long search, from the air and on the ground. on the airman's forehead and other bruises on his face but other parts cf the hody were unscathed. Ames' fate was discovered by John | Earmitt, 15-year-old farm boy, who {had joined tho thousands of volun- {eers augmenting the troops of na tional guardsmen who started out on |Sunday morning to continue the |search. The lad came upon the |wreck near the crest of the moun tain. The plane had crashed through [tindergrowth, mowed down trees. {and burled itself under a mass of {foliage and limbs, hiding from vie |the tragedy which obgervers from [the alr had for days sought to re- [veal Air mail officials expressed the opinion that Ames, confused in a fog, had driven his ship into the moun- tain. The plane was badly wrecked |but the consignment of mail was in and the pouches were on fhe to Chicago ehortly after fhe plane wes found. Rewards totalling $1,750 had been offered for the finding of Ames, anu money will likely be given to rmitt, The dead pilet had been the alr postal service for six yer He s old, a veteran of the . and nnmarried. He his home in Cleveland, his Mr, and Mrs Ames \..wlr at Hollyweod, and a |brother, Paut Ames, who ‘,.,m] in the search for the miseing ILirdman. lives at. Washington, D.C. | The wish of the parents of T [ Ames expressed in a message 10 {iaul Ames, who has taken Cchuige f his brother's body here, is lia the remains be cremated, and the {ashes sent to Jackson, Mich., whee lthe Ames family formerly resided ‘ T investigation of the cent is in charge of H. B. &ha air mail superintendent of the easl- ern division; I J. Celhaus, manager Bellafonte flving field, and veteran mail pilot way the Iyoung 1 | | Il | | Tmmh ite, D, Hiel | Another Close Call I Dubois, Pa., Oct, 12 P—The plane v ch Paul Ames of Washir m jon for Bellefonte yesterday m‘r reeaiving word that the at his brother had been found, aecident near her e proved serlo s for the expert 1 Short of ¢ the plane safely o the « met whict had it eus ering ith an ) might ) not heen of Pilot rought rion o the roind ngine had gone mishap ocenrred vost of the plane Linbois. nd 15 six miles cireled ' Pilat irifted back Short Ames, who met death in the line of | ten days ago and whose fate was re- | There was a deep cnts partici- | “[te time body | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1925, ing a perfect landing. Another plane was rushed from Bellefonte for Ames. The engine of the plane stopped, uccording to reports from the field here, when some vital part of the mechanism became overheated and burned. Fuperal Plans Los Angeles, Oet. 11 (Pi—Charles Ames, mail pilot whose body was found on a mountain side in Penn- sylvanla today after he and his plane had been missing for ten days, will |be lald to rest at Jackson, Mich,, the |city of his birth, His father. C. C. Ames, an invest. ment broker here, recelved confirma- tion of the death of bis son from Charles' brother, Paul, who went to Pennsylvania when search for the missing pilot hegan. It is hardly likely that Mr. and Mrs, Amcs will go to Michigan for their son's funeral. It has been a hard ten days for lus as it is," the pilot's father ex- plained, “and the trip would mean only more sadness, We hoped for | his return to the last moment.” Charles Ames came to California with Iis parents when he was:12 |vears old, He was graduated from high school here in 1813, later en- listing in the alr service at ®an Diego shortly after the outbreak of the World War. He was sent to Texas as an In- |structor at Brooks and Kelly fields, and when the armistice was signed \‘n\nnr] the transport service. He joined the n\r mnn service in 1920, STATE 10 AWARD ROAD AID FUNDS ‘Southington Gets $7,500; Bexlin and Plainville $10,000 R Hartford, Oct. 12.—Details of the to highway departmen{® plan to | gistribute approximately $529,000 for state-ald road purposes to vari- ous towns in Connecticut were made | public today, By the transfer of more than a half-million from the gasoline tax reccipts of th state government, it will bs possible for these towns to participate in so- callad state-ald funds to apply on {the cost of roads already | the towns in anticipation of finar assistance from the state, | Tn a number of cases the fndebt- |edness of towns dates back and elght years, or throughout four Jppropriation periods. The result | was that the highway department | was jcged with requests to aid these towns to overcome the indebt- fedness and it was powerless to re- lieve conditions as sufficient funds were not available o Relieve Town's Burdens | Commissioner John A. Macdonald outlined the situation to the board seven lof control at its last meeting and on | | recommendation of Gotvernor Trum- "rwn the transfer of funds was de- cided upon in order that the finan- ],m burden of the towns Iny mizht be reduced. | 1t was announced at the highnay | department that as further funds lare made available by the gas tax [receipts, the department from tim: its budget will pormit, to apply for ofher transfers aid improvements. Many of the remaining towns in the state o> seeking funds fo carry out their as | yropose Hfor st road programs and it s to eive these requests attention at a fu- fire v owhn by the tr enefit im- inefer are divid- 1 into two groups: Thos» under nticipaten nd 1he towns which huve operated under the “unfinished | interval” The sum of $258.260 | was authorized trz red to the “anticipated stats appropria- |tion for distribution to 29 towns, In the second gronp towns wh diately law, st ave 36 towns, coven of these are also in the | doltars | but | From Magazine Covers to Films HISSIONARY ONON | CONVENTION HERF First and South Church Women {0 Be Hostesses ‘ The women of the I'irst and South churches of New Britain will unite as hastesses in entertaining the | \\'onnn.! Congregational Home Mis- sfonary Union of Connecticut at the annual meeting on Wednesday "Hw sessiong will be held at tl South church and the following pro- | been arrange i | o'elock, session: A | Modern Mareh Throngh Georgia Miss Helen Wilcox. Peter Pan in Porto samuel Laue Loomis, vl|~m on the ]Jr"nfl'h Miss Mirtam L. Woodberry. o'clock, luncheon, dramafic monologue, Mrs, Arthur Strick- | Slavic com- | o'clock, Sonya the Slav, and, Organ mu posers, J. C. Beebe, 2:15 o'clock, Gila Mousters and Other Rev. Richard E. Shoemaker, Paci- fic Coast Missions of the A. M. A. a | Factor In Tnternational Friendship. \ " Rev, George W, Hinman Rev, Mr. 8hoemaker, whose herire is at Phoenix, Arizona, s superin- tendent of the south west, and Dr. | | Hinman of fan Franeisco, formerly a sionary to China, is secrefary of Ameriean Missionary assoclation r the Pacific const, Tt Is a very | opportunity hear {hese | \kers who come from so great a, & Mrs, Loomis is the wife of Dr., Loomis of the American Mission- yryassociation. Al of the speakers at these meetings have unusual gifts delightful person- fternoon session: | Monsters, “ | the ;. fo no anee Migs Ethelda Kenvin of Brooklyn wants to be a movie actress and is one of 20 gitls admitted to the Paramount school from 21 thousands of applicants. She is 20 years old, has posed as a model for magazine cover artists and was runner-up for the title of “Miss America” at the 1923 Atlantic City pageant, and exceptionally German Police Dog Colenester, Conn, Def. 12 (R) — | Tan driver for the Connec- tient Motor Transportat] g bitten hy a Germ: sterday when friends with face w ‘ 1gun 1 company 1 police dog | he attempted | the anim: Ihe m seriously lacers ed by the dog's feeth. The dog is | owned by Harry Bogk, who is in | charge of the chicken farm at Storrs, | The dog was sitting in an automabile and attacked Eagan when the latter | attempted to pat him. “anticipated” ving 4 net (na slton, T roup of 24 in each cla no town an participate in hoth classes under the sam2 appropriation Towns in the first cefve a payment”of the ) maximum permitted under s aid allotments in accordar v ihe | their grand stz has fal | mit towns to enter agreements with partment under it maston stport, Waterburs e W .- TE ¥ West Haven | Granhy, Groton, t o m on, £t fford and Trum. statement hows from Imost $20 that tax <hort of incoms oline into state cxpected 100 the Dighway de-'ag a result of th which roads ave|tax. T [Luilt, the state agreeing to refund the statutory preportionate cost Ithe work trom future appropria |'Towns with grand Jists of le 181,280,000 are reimbursed for s |oights of the the work, while those whose and lsts ar above that figure pay for one-quarter = . of the improiement, ‘”‘l.i '0 l{qh“.” { To Jail at, New Haven | Hare 12 (P—Olympia | at the Litchfield | s token last week | Mont Toseph Kolets tald that ek in the Inly, August ag th since merease U o NERVOUS WEN Don’t Miss This probably know fhat Oil i3 the greatest flesh pro in the world. mbe $4.1%5,59 ar three Htwo-e of during months ot tn income has $191.516.67 ticipated this yvear n effeeti cost of Southington Gets 87.500 The following towns will allotments of $7,500 {imbursement for for by them | Branford, Cane chester, Darfen, on, Greenwich, North Branford, walk, Norwieh haron vepejts as partial O already i wark paid ida i sesterdar | You 11 probability | Liver New Haven | ducer Strat ; : .“ ingagda wion e E ause it containg more Vitu SR i rara S i naton Accordiyz 1o a declsion of Judge | mir an any food you can get. Dmas ot hglen TR DT nd o) orBe Tb Hinman, will presice You'll be glad to know that Co! ST e, y ;i at the second trial, Stafe's orney | Liver Oil comes in sugar coatc Towta ol Golobrook:and . Tanrani LEnalteA s alling tand San, (IColetshy faplote now, dso) 1t8 Siou ifeally wall wrand s i s U details |10 put 10 or 20 pounds of solid ELEH A or the girl New Ithy flesh on your bones and fe ¢ chapt . laghidatl vell und strong, ask Dickinson Druy: finished. intery i [Co. or any druggist for a box o s er 5, MeCoy' Cod Liver Oil Compound | the foilowing will o Tablet res) = | credits (state and town s ol R c n | Only 60 cents for 60 tablets and | 210000 ‘ if you den't gain flv pounds $10,000 for Berlin and Platnyville d,’q\}; \'o\ll'ldr\.idgg':fifl 1: ;1)(":0:12‘03 to il v Ersar e | hand c | painful callouses on the feet, It Ber “, Cornwall, (o you back your money. At diug and shoe storcs son ven. q‘l jsn't anything unusual amden, Farn to gain 10 pounds mehoster, Dz Scholi's 2 But —the | et McCoy ville, Put- zlflO'Eflds bataisgons jgen Cod Liver Lishon, New(own, Grotol North Can Pomfret, 1 Seymour 1ding. Spra who whose lists are in : > date ve to Mn- | ap nrobe als of sla towns Avon. tast % | Lyme, hanon fown artfe for a | igton, Le 30| NIRDGH Milford, Norfolk, yme, Orange, the original Plai Tablet.”* | | {1 an | You are invited to attend a Dressmaking Demonstration given by MRS, MILLER of the McCall Company, New York Tuesday—Cutting and Fitting a Simple Frock Tuesday—How to Make Alterations Wednesday—Cutting and Fitting a Dress with Set-in Slee Thursday-—Finishing Details; holes, Bindings, ete. I'riday—Harmonizing Materials and Trimmings FROM MONDAY, OCT. 12 {o" FRIDAY, OCT. 16 Tailored Pockets, Button- Attacks Bus Driver l— Foul Tip— Tn a baseball game helps no one ex- cept the pitcher. But here’s a “fow]” tip that scored a home run for a local woman recently. All she did was to advertise a num- ber of chickens for sale among Classi- fied Ads— And sold hér chickens the next day! That's a tip to read and use our Classified columns EVERY day. OVER 12,000 HERALDS DAILY The Commercial Trust Co. NEW BRITAIN, CONN.