New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 30, 1925, Page 1

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News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 SLIDES DOWN ROPE| PR OF KNOTTED SHEETS 10 ESCAPE FLAMES Sailor Has Narrow Escape in Bridgeport Blaze--Corpse Is Carried From House INGENDIARY FIRE: ROUTS 26 FROM BOSTON TENEMENT Policemen Arouse Occupants And Guide Them to Safety—Waterbury Also Has Maine, Pircmen Have to Battle 1 lan; s in 10 Below Zero Tem- perature. ideeport, Dee, 50 P—A corpse carrled out into the it from incineration, saved bis life ird story window to the ground 1w rope made of bed ciBthe all children and persons were driven out info frigid morning air with o clothing as they could snatch ) in flight, in a fire which ecarly v swept the two family house S and 440 Union avenue. The 1« occupled by the familics Kiley and Herbert 8. Lin- a n died pneumonta, at the time th morning, last In fire were v, his Linsley night from his apart- broke out ouble nent wite, mothcr ged 7 and 5. ccond floor apartment John Kiley, owner of the house ad Mrs, Kiley, while in a room on he thire floor was sleeping their ATne F on Christ- s furlo vy home from the Slides To Safe broke out in the top of from an undetermined | und within 2 few minute tremendous headw Young the crackling of i smoke, found sped in his room on 1le tere the clothes 1 fashioned a kvotted bed, he of the 10y i attic fioor. ope. Securing this to the cnd of it out lid to the ground ropped one indow [ o hody of 1 the burning who respomle a nsley was removed house hy neig! 4 to the cries of wother. property loss is abou 5,000 Loss In Other fir and Fire in the bhorn starting than B0 hi, rowors ons ) on 1t form in hr & Paper nue, abont pt thre company. N nigit comn hauling vay throt il nigh fent Witilam G, perin to be is cover com hox cars on s ind i t Fir or stated t 15 probably ati Iy of card Al 1t spontaned vas 1o 0 Aur oar Chiix th morning when been of ince stru 1 allowe way down the and fire n o Poli offic 1| Woman Resc ral yman was smoke ¢ foree & amilics n tlames upied side apariment threate on whe t| noce H ory nov the bla ned to ating cture. Loss was | at $10,000. Terrell Home Bumed Dec, 8 r | vhones in the Fire And at Biddeford, | street to| by sliding from | | Youth, PROSPEROLS 1926 FORECAST BY BUSINESS LEADERS HERE VETERAN "PHONE MAN " Chiefs of Industry Con- fident Early Part of 10 RE"_R_E_T!]_MURRM Year Will ySee Con- [George H. Shultz in Sery-| tinued Activity. ice for Past 39 Years Follow Policy of Not Pre- H. Shultz of the Southern Telephone company 0 when there were less tele clty than there the Stanley Works plant at the |u--~-: ent time, will be retired from the | company's employ tomorrow, after| going through this long period of service without loss of time through accident, When Mr. Shultz er ploy of the company were 185 telephon George cmploy and Nie| Sound Conditio re Nation Reported. are in| Captains of industry, il ntile wo dir finance, and authorities on building | and in the realty market approach m\_j the year 1926 with a spirit of opti- in her | MisM, it was reflected toda in} EeReraiin] | statements issued from sourees, The Britain is dependent to measure on the prosperity cify's industries. In anticipation of a good in manufacturing the merchants elaborating upon their stocks. Ralph L. Gould the Chamber of merce said today the policy in mer- chandising next vear will be to in- crease stocks to as great a point with good busin, said New Britain Merchants planning hes down competition by their lines where possible. ed the 1887 mercantile is New at side of a gr {s consistent ceretary Gould to ancial tightening Morigag ted with vestors agencies in the loans 4 little stiil report no money market, being negoti- difficulty and in- are active, brokerage offices say Business Ought to Be “I'he first quarter ¢f ought to goud husiness and d likely to be," Sta pre t and s time the |3 Co Good the e one for 8000 urice creta ventured inuing, he said: 1 H. SHULTZ v the prescnt ; Works has in its plan over nd the at large | liie to go much ah nipped with 9,369 telephones, an [month pe in of 4,154 during the 3% |7That's about has been with the com- | business. In 1926 ought to be fairly vorked in various | haps about the same plant department |Our business depends o v necident hazard of |1V upon the automobile when the methods and |Of course, that is sometimes specu- the improvement and |lative. But, for the first quart refinements of the present. Recently | 1926, T look for good busines i © service but. Confident of Six Months’ Prosperity Wheul & Clarence F. Rennett, president of decidud to pension | {he Stanley Works, looks for good husiness for at least six months. He regards 1025 as a good husincss ar and finds no c tion in regu- Letiviti et gener Whether the Jater mon ar will be as good as t mld not attempt to fors expressed a feeling of that there will be no ap. let-up for al months YW 1l of & our speculations. v do ve 19 Mr. capacitiy facing the the old da tools lack go0d; Shultz t as in in the dustry and, Because of pupany has his fu ice jon Bim with hout During his termn of e company e b sorvied 1 at g company’s ¢ for ms his retire ork {hev i position i He 1 he s wire chiof it the tim 1 charge of the int is planning on he expects 1o st hout January FIRST BABY IN 1626 T0 GET START IN LIFE - Account ading of tf first R hut 1y H vhere time, nut of the pl confidence preciahle at least 1926 Year for manu going to 18 o 1y ette turing a policy of xoing will be rewarded urns, in the opinion of Kim but is derived year must he 1 rood year companies were ‘resident A, & whatever 3 from the The use I"rary hmsin good ap- nre carncd business warns. ar Vo8 bee the profit- go-getters,” e s which od returns in the r ikely to extend in ew Yeark and should be ac- d by profitable s No Slump Coming hine tool industry is not ting up to capacity and proba will not for some time to com thero §s no indication that the volume of business transacted in the latter months of 1925 will slump in he first six months of 1926 Rogers, viee-president and of the Skinner Chuck Co, While capacity production 1w the practice this year busine was regarded as very good, In fact setter than for many of the prece vears, Mr. R explains, Pre s to business after the fir conld not urately amount ! made at this time and he would venture none Iy Months of 1926 Favorable months of 192 lik s a continuance of cu rent business in the opinion of Pres- ident H. H. Pease of the New | ain Machine Co. Mr. Pease’s o | vations o similar to those expr: 1 other m the bus thin’ for Year's New- est Clitizen Britain into most bank rom of milk, Tt will its imme tak onne child liatc vial welfa of rough the menis of men happi- secretary . care believes, an that ey will contrib ot Her wi 1 will s . $10 1 1¢ thi s bank and | until th owr money is p 1 to it is 21 " Wl dictior ix month he 3 he felt v to mn & Barry Nation Shop severa ed today Good Year For Gray Tron Twelve months of good looked forward to by cler of the Union ing Co, vices he has received while on bus ness trips into trading centers, upon | his observations of the financial and | political situ he feels it is a !safe prediction that 1926 will be a BY | hoom year for the gray iron indu try. The year 1925 was but a “fair rs who for s business H H Manufactur- Drenched With Gasoline Friends, Becomes Living Torch inued on Page 15) STRAWBERRIES COSTLY Essential of One When His Clothing Catehies Fire, (Coi Reading Pa., Dec, 30 (P—Claude | Millard | 18, « 1 lle, near | , last : victim of ¢ on him A pany. told low work Brand town Portland C According iends of eral others shanty cake Priced At $1 Per Quart in to by Philadelphia Today. we % 30 (P— \ in the w stablished a in ania burcau of traw- new 1 itk me a jard ran to a pool o yard hut it was frozen the 1 a| markets announced. Sixty-nine quarts were in the con- signment hours later dicting Too Far Ahead— leaders In | rs of | various | the | i Com- | extending | quarter is | in | nost entire- | rof | 1 of Landers, | 1925 | returns to | Brit- | ssed | Basing his conclusions on ad- | of Short- | VLD\L‘SDA\ DECEMBER 30, 1925. ICAUSE OF CANCER ZJONISTS SELECT BAFFLES SCIENCE DR, DUNN DELEGATE Basis of Disease i Wise's Remgnanon Another Equally Prominent Adopt Resolution Of Confidence Central N‘h"nv In | tist Not Comvineed While Another | Exccutive Committee— i Maintains That Cancer Is NOt an Difierence Of Views Alred At Infections Allment. Meeting In Synagogue, New Haven, Dec The sol¢ is of cancer is heredity, and peo- born without a straln of the dis- {niintain order, case are immune, Dr, L. Strong | Zionist distric he v Institute of Harvard |Synagogue, | University here today | Rabbi Wise dispute, and "'ro conclusion of a symposium on itions signl heir faith | cancer conducted by the American |th ntral executive committee, and Zoologlsts, the New Britain representative, Dr. is announcement, however, |Morris 8. Dunn, who will represent Dr, Strong added the condition that [the local organization at the mect- | even where lity traces exist, en- |ing in New York Sunday morning, | vironmental factors would seem to|when the Zionist anization will necessary ag irrvitants in order o [act on Rabbi Wise's resignation. ake the disease act w Du at which president New g a difficult meeting for the the ust night 1o take it as to In at des | Socie The following resolution was pass- Others who spoke at the sympo-|ed after a two hour meeting [stum were Dr, James B, ¥, Murphy |«whereas, realizing the fact t | of the Rockefeller Institute for M the approaching United Palestin al Research, Dr. Halsey J. Bagg of | inajen « nds the co-oper the Cornell Medical College, and Dr e e (o nktor James Ewing of Cornell University, | tulflllment who led the discussion, Sehtrallexaoutive it eoLnaili et Cause Not Known, |Zionist organization is fully c Declaring that no theory can be |to direct the affairs of the Zionist | formulated at the present time as to | ation, being as it is in im- | the cause of cancer, Dr. Murphy as- act with conditions, we, | serted that recent published an- |the Zionist District of New Britain the isolation of the | o hereby resolve to stand ready | nouncements ancer germ by Dr. Ny of London, 414 and support the executive coun- with Dr. ol in whatever decision it may working in collaboration i rnard, are not to be accepted |make in the direction of the United vithout important rescarching. | Palestine appeal.” (0 wish to 1indulge In| The resolution was pa structive criticsm of |1 go majority, although Rubbi > has wndoubtedly | 5, Aronson, of the Tefereth Isr nt observation, but fsongregation, leader of the opp this nature will Te-¢jon, expressed himself as bei ve careful @n- |, eningt the resolution on the rallel biologicul exper-{gpat action shouid be deferred un any final judgment 5 national council meets, Hos LT G B LT, be insisted that Dr. Dunn be a vote of confidence, The was glven unanimously. Asks About Resolution “There was an evident attempt qglose the mecting last night with out referring to the resignation of | Dr. Wise, Before the mecting thers hi were excited groups who discussed \e e | the situation in loud accents. Ir 5 ing 1. Rachlin, president of based SO ; 5 : w Britain Zionist district, on elaborate exp nents 2 ducted a short business mice conducted over| ., .gv, and told his or ars. He den i (RS o breeding families of mice that were Lon acre ‘.‘“s 9 Faurbis vess the meeting would clo 90 per cent Immune to cancer and | 3 r familics that were 100 per cent | A man from Bristel arose. R e rh holding a Herald in his hand, sald, “I see by the paper th are pgoing to pre it a tonight asking that Dr. t its the pabl me do not itical ¢ s work, for made an impor observations of quire perhaps | alysis with p | iments before an be Murphy. Dr. Bagg reported his finding, | | after experimentation with mice and | | study of clinical histories of women, | that th bubie little, it any, effe producing cancer of the brea by 16 [iven |vote to perimented On Mice, Strong’s conclusior heredity plays in th | velopment of cancer we Dr. on Y con- | largely | with “ v bus he Approaching these experiments from the point of view of a geneti- . Dr. Strong came to tl % sion (hat “the characteristics of can- | 1'aW iafion a: cor are biological in nature and are Tom fhe ELlstiefarn introduced through the process i) MBI 038 B0 D L \eredity,” and that “heredity is the | tho motion.” substratum’ or background upon This seemed to he ! \which environmental factors act as which had dertnz. § excited men irritation | Dr. ed up and expressed their views Del once. President Rachlin hammered on the table With the gavel in an effort 1o restore order, He told the ting that it would be in order or not at al the course of the evening ma1 in the front interrnpted several speakers repeatedly. The room w cold, but Rachlin fook off and stated that either the wonld be conducted orderly would turn over the cl another, For ive quict re vou any York Wise of the been smoui- ving Not Convineed Lwing objected to arriving ite convictions from I experiments, “There is a considerable differ eneo of feeling on the importance heredity in the human subject he explained. have been unable |to find sufticient evidence that these experiments in lower animals force us to conclude that h ity is tin determining factor in the develop- {1ent of cancer among human beings. “In the first place, no such genetic onditions exist a men ong these lower animals, nor arc v likely to exist. Iurthermore, (V'Pl"‘m'm] on Pa Strong'’s carriec Du one mec on of his coat meeti or elsc he irman- T, time t ship to short comp “Have from New ong as ned communicati asking this or ge !M (Continued on Pa ‘AS YEAR ENDS HOUSEWIFE FINDS i GROCERY EXPENSES ARE GREATER e 16) Ham {s now 1 fard brand, 5 c year ago. Bacon is 38 | pou nd for a standard . cents higher than a y Two Unchanged, Survey | i e era than last year. cents for a Dozen Articles Cost More. nts Nine Are Lower and \berry sa of Items on Whole- If you ave poultry for , the pockethook consi is ca sale List Shows. ore than last is abo as While flour changed, the and 4 Vegetables Hit Purse Vegetables are wa the he Irish potat to $4.50 a hundred nd were $1 31 weet potatoc e a ey 1s | now, compared ioago | Carrots, string artment | are all a lit fruits and ¢ Dee. Chicago, 30 (A—TI at t or 1 1 itens on her groe e house 5 finds most ry shopping expensive than they | Of 33 articles in | and fruit line, are higher, two are un ago today. Average. su butt ents a yr ris 48 ce i ago. more a year ago. meat, vegetable wholesale prices | nine er and | changed fri A year Prices Are Quotations on whi | a stockyards on 1 of agriculture vegetables, the Minneapolis price on | just the e. Cabbage is now | flour and the Chicago Produce Ex-|lo $45 a ton, wh | change on poultry and produce. Jn|ago was to § main, these quotations govern| Salad lettuce is mow $3.50 ces over most of the country, ex-|a crate compared with $5 where d nees in freight make variations on poultry however, gay all clas; are much higher this than last everywhere. rting at the top of t is about half last Hard. 1king the family purse, s. T lop at esp of ey are pound &1 litt a vy and ca while with fan Onions ar $40 w 10 1o $ | last year. If you have a fruit sala oranges, both Florida and Cali are noticeably lower, and so too ar appl The ¢ if yo them here, are m lower now than year, 42 cents now for firsts, whi a year ago brought 50 to § | Tomatoes are now so searc All down through menu 15 & | they are not quote | note of chcer in flour which is now | ago they could and was a year ago $9.60 a barrel. |10 $9 a crate Prices of Meats, | — For the meats, beef is a bit low- ! er, while pork, ham and bacon are | very m her. A rib rdast v round steak are about the vrice as last r, 26 cents on nd 14 cents on round s sirloins and pot ro cents lower now, sirloins dro; from 30 to 28 cents and pot roast| frm 1410 12 cents. s. use year, 1t o men | celery year's pri the b while bought six baskets, for and same ribs while ch each 2| THE WEATHER Cigas Hartford, Dec. 30.—Forecast for New Britain and vicinity Fair tonigh: and Thursday; warmer Thursday ! | v Symposium at Yale Delves Into Fail to Expoess Opinion on Dr. | ONE CALLS IT HEREDITARY HAVE ~LONG DISCUSSION‘ Britain | in | and that the | to | ground | the meeting and t you resolution with- as chairman signal for mp- Average Daily Circulation F' Week Ending ] 2’ 468 Dee. 26th ... —~EIGHT LLN PA(:ES MINERS AND OPERATORS SEEMINGLY DETERMINED TO REACH SOME KIND OF AGREEMENT TO RESUME MINING {Both Sides Willing To | Remain In New York, | They Indicate, Until Settlement Is Reached. Police Court Judge Promises Jail For All Drunken Drwers WAITS SEVEN VEMRS prastic 10 OBTAIN REVENGE | Punishment in Future. | B \Gen, Cheng Killed hy Son of Father He Murdered in 1918 1"l Have Been Too Leni-| ent,” Hungerford Says, | Arbitration Is the Big Hitch and Miners Are Strenuously Opposed to Submitting Differences to Outside Influences. Threatening g a car of liquor 15t Main streets, sman of 70 fined in erford Judge for and 1 with driviy luence and ms, a while er the last | ight at M B, H. will Cone street, Hartford, 1?1‘”! and sentenced to {ail by Judge William ¢, police court | William ¥. Mangan, | Williams, appealed Judge Hungerford | “I have been entirely with people who drive ¢ {under the influence of liguor,” clared Judge Hungerford to ser Wi ing now, that after I am going to sentence wny man who is found g iving a car under these i ons." | Officer Grabeck clalms {found Williams whe st The was (P —General lltu known Dae, § popular was killed, together with members of his staff, by a thrown at his railw $500 bond. | at Langfang 1z too lenient | The assassin, self-proclaimed in a while |country-wide manifesto, was Lu de- | Cheng-Wu, a captain in the Kiomin- [ want |chun (National Peoples army) and here- General Lu Chien-Chang, to vhom little Hsu shot in Lu's garden lat Tientsin while a dinner guest there in 1918, Captain Lu, who ap- parently has not been arrested, de- red his act was in revenge for asleep last night at N8 father's murder. of his car on Main and| T4 is a cousin of Marshal Feng n ot er 11 o'clock, | Vu-Hsiang, formerly styled “t} id e awakened Wil [Christian general,” who commands iid, “It's all right—I'm |the Kiominchun forces which re- |cently occupied Tientsin, | Heu had just arrived after a tour :M Burope, the United ates and | 30 H this mornir New York, Dec. 30 (P—Anthra- cite miners and operators today ex- pressed themselves determined to re- | main in New York until an agree- ment s signed and send the 168,000 idle men and boys back to work as | quickly as possible. This was developed today when | Major W. W. Inglis, chairman of the operators' wage negotiating com- mittee, sald that so far as the op- erators were concerned they would sit every day, regardless of the New Year holiday, to work out a new contract, “Too much is at stake on cach side lto take a recess over the hollday." |said Major Inglis before going into i”“" joint wage conference at the Union league this afternoon. Leaders among the miners also expressed their willingness to sit where he studied political, ; day, . The rminerd e ih i Peking government. He had report- [ 6 Hie (900 BIOGRCOF ‘o das L B G and 166t the minors remain 1dle. S ;‘,“‘“‘](“‘Z"'fl, Sun Chuan-Fang, governor of Ch A Arkiation ik m:d'l H e did not | A K her milltary lenders at | Arbitration is the big hitch. The and thought he | 28 bomb-. | miners have taken a strong stand e ereant cats | Mientsin, where his train was bomb- | ™ Rt S against submitting their differences and gave other evi- 5 g to outside influences and today re- oxicated, | Ancther yeisign af the sar peated their statement made in con tion received this evening Indicates iy, onoq yesterday that they were |that Hsu was shot while strolling on | TG Copased to arbitration now the statlon plattorm at Langane. .. |22 they were foun monthin #go; cassin xivote: -1 waited seven lonz | For this reason they are opposed s to avenge the shooting of my |to that feature of the Alvan Markir tather. By the help of his spirit |Peace ~plan submitted yesterda basi tecined my hand | which provides for three-‘mpart) e g o0 | citizens” appointed by the presiden: of the United States to decide points lmE STRANI]S flN “;E not azreed upon by miners and op- 9 | erators. ‘w appointment by the president of a hoard of three impartial citizens [Animal U nable to Stand ¢ represent the public. This eiti- zen's committee would submit rec- Up, Rescued by ommendations to the president and portsmen Hs ral |bomb, riage |in |son of Jail v ¢ condi- that he ) af offi liams who in a gara The ofticer | stated that Williams |was about two feet away from the rect car would @ to turn the cor ing the machine. Matthias Rival who track, 10t have bee ner without |Desk Sergeant ated that he know Berlin d, ot bel was in he T dence Williams claimed that he was Irunk, but that was exhausted frem lack of sleep, & he unable to a berth on a He had three gla of chumpagne. that he was drunk, ruuse night [t 1o Dyonezy Karasciaviez {strect, was fined $100 for driving ¢ car Monday night while his licen was suspended. Attorney Morris “axe, counsel for the defendant \nl was only driving the car ¢ Iriveway gnal Gas West Main street, for a had gotten of the a cigarette, Karascic s suspended N 'm i 60 . | Two Main Plans Two main plans have come be- fore the conference thus far. One |is the Markle plan which calls for as the M\un friend r to on who out light refusing to aceept a ticket | Dolan this morning at | sn his hus was parked | of Main street, near | ‘hurch strect, Elmer Peterson, age 1, 151 Dwight street, a driver the Ouk street busline, was fined $10 1 costs for violating the motor ve- laws. b ittee of miners and ors consisting of three repre- sentatives of each side, In the event of a deadlock in the joint commit- tee of the wdustry, the cltizens | would have pow to cast deciding j votes, The second in m . Monier set out for the com- reservoir in West Hartford vesterday ostensibly to indulge in |the winter sport of kings, fishing through the ice, but the fishing party hungry {turned out to be an unusual event as there Mr. Monier and a doe taking thought [the principal parts. Mr. Monier, with amed Brown, were intently watch- \eir flags about the holes for when his attention object some di on plan s the Pinchot plan, which calls for a five-year agreement, a board of investigation nd award and a modified form of he checko In reply to the kle conte hicle Peterson claimed he was and 1 breakfast and was o parking space, he re was no in the mi I he said he ¢ wheel of the wppeared, and he to the driver. Dolan w t wante | with wrm in of t breakfasted, Officer De about to tie a ticket to car when Peterson handed the ticket acquaintance ars' arguments, ded that his plan does not provide for arbitration, but sots up machinery similar to that of the concilintion board created in 1903 by the anthracite coal strike commission ap by President Itoosevelt. The conciliation is eom- posed of three miners and three op- rators. It settles matters of inter- pretation of the wi ts that cannot decided at the mines be- tween me nd management, When the members of the board cannot gre on a disputed point it is pre- 1 to an umpire appointed by S. circult court of appeals at P! Iphia. { Mr. Markle contended that in- stead of having one man act as um- pire to decide disputed points he would have three because the job is too big for one man. The miners, however, 1 in this light and announced would continued to stand arbitration in any form, iving at rate of wages, ile was was drawn to an ance away. Mr. Monier remarked companion that he thought it was a dog, but Brown, looking in- ently, thought it might be a deer. | To settle stion, both men rried to the spot and upon ap- pach they discovered that a full-sized doe. The animal was spread-cagled on the smooth ice, unable to do more than keep its footing . It attempted to scramble at the approach of the men its hardest efforts only served s wider apart and its zardous. <aid youth to | Officer ke the to board long CAPT KLLLY LIKELY 10 BE NANED FIRE CHIEF FitzGerald of New Haven S was be \way fer the T [ position mor Pitying the ani d to get th vithout injury to Dec. 30 (P—Keen was with the k shown b he proximity of Mr. Monier intil he was near its head. He put his arms around s and attempted Mayor Expected to Make Appoint- . the doe to lan it or to them. It owledge that the in a panic an beings tha men ments Today. o, bly hu mal was pr did not see R edge oser Mayor by David then 7 (Continued on Page 1) d on (Contin age 15) 'DYING MAN REPENTANT, BEGS TO SEE WIFE AND CHILDREN Mr., It from eivi [ mayor wi |3 Lange, , said that his son ying and that he was ntly begging that his wife for- him and let him see the ehil- -\Sends Father to Bristol to |, Ask Deserted Woman to |eiv A |dren, Dorothy, 6, and Meta, 4. Come to His Bedside. Mr. Lange said that his son came to New York with a young woman who, he sald, was his wife, and they _|had lived together until a few me ago when the woman Pe- his | turned to Bristol. Mr. Lange sall that had had no knowledge of the family in Bristol. He pleaded | with the wife to go to New York 1 she conscnted, and will leave for that clty tomorrow with the vill be one of 120 of 30 Movie Extra 1 Girls Couldn’t Smoke | New York, December » — motion pi director received the surprise of his life when 20 ou! oxtra” girls employed in a Metro-Goldwyn-Maver produc- they did not know |children, Henry rettes pALI ) (P—Critic possibly Bristo!, Dec il N York h bed, and repen in which he had tr W c on ant for the way ited his wife and Lange sent his night to plead with at she come and see him him see the children. young woman who disappear- ars ago Lange left home, ed from Forestville at the time e went ‘ln"nf- went away, returned home ' woman of For- [some monthk ago, or about the time nge was surprised | the senior Lange says his son's wife a man came to her [left him in New York. con- | house mi m.dv himself known as| Lange, the son, was a motorman that G ve Lange, her father-in-law. |here. Mrs. Lange has supported her- 80 |Her husband had always sald his [self and children by manual labor parents were dead. | since she was left aimost penuliess, new tion fossed how to smoke A group flappers was when last r smoking | his wif d le Three and it w away with a you they | estville Nrs. L a scene, enjamin an cigarettes. that anson, rty he ‘true magazine girls appe said Christl ar nson, 8 movie sophisticated,” R iP o Bidm s % Ny M

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