New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 30, 1925, Page 20

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MANVILE ESTATE 10 HiS GHILDREN Is Valued Between 25 and 80 Millions New York, Oct. 30 (P—The will of Thomas F. Manville, head #f the Johns Manville Company, filed for probate, leaves the bulk of his es- tate, estimated at between $25,000,- 000 and $30,000,000 to his two children—Thomas F. Manville, Jr, whom he disinherited following his elopement with a follles chorus girl, and Miss Lorraine Manville, musical comedy actress and wife of Jay Gould, musical comedy actor. 1n addition to dividing his residu- ary estate between his son and daughter, Mr. Manville set aside trust funds of $2,000,000 for each of them and directed they receive the income until they are sixty when $1,000,000 of the principal will be paid to each of them. The other half of the trust fund will remain fn trust and the income be paid to them during thelr life time. At their death the principals are to go to their heirs or as they direct in their wille. Mrs, Clara C. Manville, former wife of the asbestor king, who ob- tained a divorce in Bolse, Idaho, in 1900, and filed a petition in bank- ruptey in 1017, was not mentioned in the will. Mr. Manville dled of heart dis- “ ease in his apartment in the hotel Plaza October 19 last. Tn addition to providing for hls son and daughter, Mr. Manville be- queathed $1,000,000 to the Fifth Avenue hospital of which he was + president. ‘Thomas F. Manville, Jr, whose first wife divorced him several years . mgo, was married on September 30 last to Miss Lois Arline McColn, for- merly of Lawrence, Kansas. Mrs. Gould secretly married Jay Gould fast February. They had previously both had roles In the musical come- dy “Plain Jane.” 7W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1025. | BETTER ELEVEN COLDY GAS USE FIELD ANLTR}CKMARKSV N TEMS FEDS 10l Burners Produce High Pres- sire On It Past Outdoor Athletic Season Has Been Notable One Across Water Paris, Oct. 80 (M—Eleven track and fleld records of France were beaten during the 1925 outdoor ath- letic season which has just come to a close and which also proved to be eone of the most successful from the point of view of attendance in the history of French sports. The new records established are: 100 metres: 10 seconds 6-10, by Andre Mourlon, 110 metres hurdles: flat, by Georges Sempe. Snyder, Tex, reservoir of e non-inflammable | fields of this sectlon used to operate pumps, The gas is said to insure the most 16 seconds economical operation in the listory | of oll production. Small wells, which 200 metres: 21 seconds 6-10, otherwise would require more Andre Mourlon, { for their boilers than they 800 metres; 1 minute 55 seconds ' produce are now operating at flat, by Baraton. | profit. 1500 metres: 3 minutes 58 seconds | For a time the gas mystified oil 8-10 by Bontemps. men and chemists, but it finally has One mile: 4 minutes 20 seconds leen analyzed as an air containing 1 2-10, by Wirlath | about 93 per cent nitrogen. Three miles: 14 minutes 44 sec- | One of the strange sights here is and s being machinery by oll a 30 (A—A vast| gas has been discovered in the oil | and | thing the men wish to cool is placed could | W——— without fire, The gas fa run Into the | bollers and in two minutes & pres- | sure of 125 pounds is attained, From | the boller the “alr" {8 carrled under pressure through the usual steam | lines to pumps and machinery, | The air has been used to drill | three different wells within a radius of three miles, Additional producers | have all struck this gas in sufficient | quantities to finish their wells, Men In the fleld use the air for anything steam would accomplish. All they need to do is to turn the alr Into the boller, which merely | acls as a reservoir to equalize pres- | sure. Tt also is used to inflate au- tomoblles tires and for refrigeration. | ‘Watermelons, milk, water, or any- !\ under the exhaust of an engine, | which Is covered with {ce Instead of | | being hot with steam. A watermelon | left under the exhaust for two hours will freeze solid. | The alr itself is not actually cold, | but the release of pressure produces the effect of cold, similar to the process of manufacturing fce with amonia under pressure, | The gas makes between three and | five million cubic feet a day, from | onds 2-10, by Marchal, to see bollers producing pressure High jum Jne metre ninety-five centimeters, by P. Lewden, 20 kilometers: one hour, eight minutes, 26 selonds 2-10, by Thier- ree, Discus throw: Plerre, Hammer throw: 40 metres 80, by Zaltdin, Sleuths Snake to Hedge; Is Killed in Revenge Douglas, Ga., Oct. 30 (RA—Davis, hunter and trailer of snakes, has scored again. Crawling through a dense thicket and roping with a shoe-string a five and a half foot rattler that was thought to have caused the death of a boy, Lewis Adams, C. M. Davis, the youthful foeman of snakes, added another skin to his coleletion. The snake was identified as the one which struck young Adams, through the finding of double fangs on the right side and none on the left, These tallied with the wound. The Adams boy had gone into the woods carrying a sling-shot with which to hunt birds. He was bitten and died that night, Hear- |® ing of the incident, Davis started |§ on the trail of the reptile, and & after considerable hunting found it in a hedge near a fence. | 43 metres 10, by WORLD'S GRE GETS $1,600 ART PRIZE Chicago, Oct. 30 (A—Albin Polasek, an instructor in the art institute, was awarded the $1,500 Logan prize and medal for his sculptured bronze figure of a wo- | man ‘“unfettered” in the annual American painting and sculpture ex- hibition, opening at the art institute today. Sculpture played the chief part in the awards taking three of the four principal prizes for the first time | in 37 exhibitions. ) NEW BRITAIN Mail Post Card to “Salada’ and get a 10c trial pacKage. Either blacK, green or mixed _ blend. State your preference. THE “SALADA” TEA CO., BOSTON MARTINELLI THIS SUNDAY CAPITOL THEATER 3:30 P. M, —— Auspices Ticket Sale 5 C. L. PIERCE CO. 246 Main Street the first well, with a rock pressure of more than 300 pounds, ) MUSICAL CLUB | YOU PAY NO MORE—YET HAVE MORE TIME TOPAY E:"._ : ‘i 1% | The only difference service charge — ahso- lutely One Price wheth- er cash or ten pay plan. NO RED TAPE HIS PLAN INCL - ABSOLUTELY ONE PRICE—WH Nearly every necessary commodity is sold on the time payment plan. our plan and buying an automobile, a home, etc., is that we do not charge interest, brokerage or Why Put Off Buying Your Fall Suit and'Overcoat? Get Them on Our New HERE’S THE PLAN You purchase whatever articles you desire at our regular “year round” low prices; you pay at that time cne-fourth down of the purchase price and the balance is then divided into ten weekly payments. For example:— (These Items May Be More or Less) U e s i 529150 BONIS S UL o s s aete 7.50 SHIRT $2.00 $40.00 10.00 $30.00 THIS BALANCE PAID IN TEN WEEKLY PAYMENTS OF $3.00 EACH e ke SRR L TR R R T NO DELAY JUST PLAIN HONEST BUSINESS in CASH (One-fourth) .. 0P New Britain NO EMBARRASSMENT UDES EVERYTHING FOR THE BOY DS EVERYTING FOR THE BO7 NY SUALE SH 357 MAIN STREET 135 MAIN STREET \ f | the fine arts commission, As critic | leves, are flowers a suiltble decor- | the ministry of agriculture by the of all things affecting the capital | ation. | chict of the fisheries burea re- landscape, the commission las sug- | e e cently returned trom a survey of (he gested to park officials that well i OYSTER BED FOUND Gulf of San Matlas, T'he locajion of Flowers in Washington Plots Are Not Approved Washington, Oct, 80 (A=The floral plots which for years have|kept grass and evergreens aro more Buenos Alres, Oct. 20 P — The | the oyster bed ls glven as about 20 decoraled Washingtos's small cir. | effective than flowers on small arcas. | discovery of an oyster bed covering | miles south of Port San Antonio and cular parks at avenue intersections | Only where they can be grown in | nearly 400 square miles off the coast [at a deptli varylng from 15 to 20 have come under the disapproval nr‘nro:‘uslun over larger areas, it h\'-lo! Patagonia has been reported to|meters below the level of (he sea. e T T ! Savings deposited by Open Novemmber2nd\ sacurday draw interest Nights grom the 1st Tt09 THE COMMERCIAL TRUST COMPANY NEW BRITAIN, CONN. it Many Smartly Dressed Many Smartly Dressed Women Are Finding A Women Are Finding A Bee Hive Charge Account Bee Hive Charge Account A Great Convenience A Great Convenience ETHER CASH OR T This Ten Pay Plan was instituted in interest of the man who would rather pay on a weekly hasis than the whole amount at one time, yet buy the highest grade of merchandise without additional whatsoever. charges FOR MOST SUCCESSFUL CHOOSING Winter Coats Saturday—At The Bee Hive—Where Every Last-Minute Style For Petite Women, Average Women and Large Women Is Featured At Low Prices 25 - 35 - 45| Whatever Your Coat Preference—It Is Here! Flared coats with bewitching grace of line--straight- line coats-—-wrappy and exquisitely slender--Coats with collars, Tuxedo, Shawl, Question-mark and Queen Anne collars of the very best furs. SELECT YOUR Lipstick Red Cuckoo Sea Swallow Squirrel Beaver Fox

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