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HIGH SCHOOL FOR PLAINVILLE YOUTE Proposed Structure Will Cost Town About $200,000 (8pectal o Herald,) T’ln(n\fllv March 13—The ed new $200,000 Plainville school, action on which will be en when special committees work- ing on the subject will report to a Bpecial town meeting Monday night, will be a model of efficlency and cconomy of space, The committer examined reports made from studies of morc than 100 types of huildings in the United States selected that which provides most instruction area in the number of cuble feet This was a chief point In sclee- tion of plans, and few of the peting archjtects had compared their plans with these nationswide studies g0 that the majority of plans did not meet the conclusions of the investi gatlons, That seleeted mects eve exclusiy Propos- high tak- school and th lea | \ com vy of gym- auditorium 68 H2.5 yer cent of the huilding struc- tlon pury ' s submitted by Willian ; ident of ¢ fehool Plan § reau of dletown bl 1l roomis . On this and show e by sldes. ed “igl On 1} wing, room. Vs tiest flooT sliding blackhe n it end 1h drawing rovahl nical room, hoing hall will be the s in tio He . office the n neee the sn wifice of the principal, room, A room for the ne tor or e h i ving nd entrance «ith a waiting roou master clock and conter connecting all in buildi auditorium, seating will wlso be on tl will have @ balcony motion ¥ teachers’ the for LSSTOOMS vill he the docs room tho ¢ | offics i be telephone Eenera Y e iner the 00ms the and tire oha fonr alou rooms of the e (lnrerooms riment for hookl and means of gutes, use the gymuasinin or auditorium and shut off all oth parts of the structure, The of the committees' pluns now r with the voters of the tow be decided Monday nigl WESTERN LITERARY TASTES ITEMIZED, Editor of Sunset Magazine Makes Interesting Survey or fate nand San 1y the mirers neisco, March 13 (P— trashy cowboy novel has any ad- | i mountal praivie | tates, thers hing to indicate i in the spondence of Josceph | Henry literary cditor of Sunset the or is not cor Juckson, Maguzine, | to what is sometinies bee ular in Contrary | estern ar st as they but it tory in stern Jackson and letters from them he forms 15 to the literar estern reader nee of app: “wild yearly hooks colored h of oo s | 00d hool reader o who is 70 to the an Iy inte y with M s its plac xico, Listorical alin 1, partienlarly ith hi tory, inks the popularity seetion can be ranked yout as follows hy, popular and humor. loser to com- tern ks in 1 o8 to cla fietion seien Hun . poetry doubtless would be ¢ ther Umorous few e Looks s those r pul d criticisms, ind H q reviewed radio 00k -revie Now broadeast rmed | Dimselt ber miliarize s of a n from fifteen o round devote the year to of novel” he dr this, entire o time, | This | This | practice | not our is enough to To accomplist o D Clare paragraphs. al consumed 1 me must 1 and essional, i result requires trainin superficlal in as one m word | dis- will | < his opinion 1) to read b method whi completely recoguition, upon d coming thoro the him ont of curl SCH AEF RSG‘{E\N e Jake May Be Compelled 1o wait| More Than a Year Before Getting a Chanee to Regain Crown wor LN SMUGLLING DECREASING ) NI NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MRS. HOME INFLUENCE AFFECTS WORKER Dome Hian at His Job Gilh €0 | lopments in » Temple Site A MEETING JUNTOR TEADASS LILLIAN GILBRE iic Conditions Rellected in' opinio support 1 SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1926, FLASHES OF LIFE: PRESIDENT IS NOTIN FAVOR OF THE BLUE LAWS Iy the Assaclated Press, New York—Iure whiskey and third rail bootleg stuff have been provided for Bellevue hospital by ueneral Andrews so that tests shall |be made as to the effect of hootch |on topers. The hospital has inform- | e the general that the annual aver- |nge of deaths from alcoholism in i New York is 500, I Some 450 cases of champagne liave been selzed on the steamships President Polk and President Hayes. Most of it was marked ‘“alum,” colored carth,” and “sulphate of | lTuminum." Ciovernor Daxter of Maine, from abroad, alding the | States, back thinks prohibition 1s | Maglstrates f‘orrigan and Gordon | disagree as to whether selling lquor | constitutes disorderly conduct under {the state statues. The one replased Iw defendant; the other imposed a i fine, | Witimantie, Conn Giangs gun- {men and bootleggers on Manhattan | Island are largely due to the re- |treat of Christian churehes—well inigh a national calamify"—in the lopinion of Dr. 8 1. D, Forsythe of | Philadelphia, secretary of the M. E. Inome missions board, Washington-— President Ldisapprovea proposals for e blue laws 1] designed to end Sun- shows and eports. Snn Antonio—@G. E. Harrison, fed- 41 prohibitlon agent, is seeking a yn\l ard of $500 offered by vernor for conviction of a dry tor worth over $5,000, Har- { rison convicted one worth 85, aneces, Philadelphia —Prohibitlon agents o recenily di was being made | ¢laims to fip ‘ a chemist liair tonie. L from vinegar now in three minutes from vrrf-wlk -— Mlss Mary anthropist, dies. ldridge, Middletown HHJL two records semi-finals of the New England intercollegiate swimming cham- | plonship mert at Wesleyan. First P from 18°.) stor finds no suth in reports that youth {s being rrupted by prop: nda, spread by lootleggers, hotel keepers who want and persons op- amendment, They do not | 1 progrs | I t Poland, m. New Haven cir burs back osed to 18th titiaho of the wns to comi Two United thems tors make forced vithin t her Anjured. Hartford —— Waterbury of state prison, States land- anee to man, Derlin fmmed mate te hand w 150 th press. hecans which lons ited to enter to German netional to Germ in Mariford — T members of Connecticut Valley Tohnrro soriation violate contracts & ny's na lopment tion claims; fine 'hrN. sue four!h interest, Hartford rate of interest Teachers complain on state teachers’ cotion of Swedish Foreign commerce of the Unlted Coolldge | overed that alcohol | ave seen it produced by | in-! suffers injury | feh was caught in print pared with interest pald by some savings banks; board answers that | {fund is not invested with idea of gain through speculation, Waterbury = Dr, martin, well authority, dies. 'homas J. Kil- known smallpox belleves ten men out of a jury suffl- cient for decislon. New Britain—Two men injured in {automobile accident. ew York -— With the return of a church party from a crulse to the Holy Land on which dancing, | smoking and drinking were den, 1t develops that some bootleg dancing among the young folks abroad caused rebukes by chap- | | erones, L4 Scranten, Pa. -— I"ashionable men and women, indulging in smoking and drinking, are responsible for modern {deas that are young people to degradation ruin, - {n the Judge Albert W. ew York -~ Some New York ndmothers years ago played post office and rode with one-arm- {ed drivers on country roads Towa, they admit. With this reve- lation, Mrs. Anna Steese Richard- son has told a meeting of Towans of New York that the girl of today who pets in autos or trol- {ley cars is more honest, Johnson. New York — Lady Cynthia Mos- {ley has gone back to England with- | having seen the Charleston. t those thlngs are all | Everyone ought to dance and have a good time.” Greenay, France — Forty couples celebrating silver or golden wed- ding anniversaries will be escorted tomorrow in anclent carriages over the wooded walks where they made love in youth. They are all survivors of wartime of the town. New York — Mary Lewls of the opera Von Bethlen, Hungarian premier. Her fiance, “Bondy.” who s study- ing banking here, vorng, tall, dark, | Hong." 15 wonderful Cambridge, Mass. Jim Smith seems to be the world's champion {at picketing, He's been at §t four | vears, ever since stereotypers went 'on strlke at a book publishing plant. TOO GOOD FOR MOVIES Nice, 00 good a jockey for the movies. Steve came to Nice to take one of the chief parts in a new film _ [called “Riding for the King." His !nrxt work was to ride o horse in a race with an automobile, in which the car was supposed to win, But Steve got excited and won the | race. A whole afternoon’s work and | it |many feet of flim were wasted. | Bridgeport -~ Ferdinand Pecora | forbid- i in | the | right. | bombardment | 1s to wed the son of Count | “a handsome, | dar- March 15 (F—8reve Donog- | 'STATE OF OSCAR MOBERG APPRAISED AT §58,182 retirement fund is low when com- Former Landers, F'rary & Clark 1'ac- | tory Exccutive Had $46,718 In | Stock In That Company. D. strom, appraisers of the estate | the late Oscar Moberg, have fil | their report in probate court, listi | properties in the amount of $5 182.08, of whie | sented in | stoek. Land®y, ¥rary & Cla Other items appearing on the iist are: \ Forty shares of stock In the Britain Finance corporation, second mortgage, $2,680; . L. Hatch Co,, in r ¢ bonds, $¢ -—payment 2 National [$850; dividend o va & Clark, $497; slck : coupe, 1925 model, $5 1l estate, § 07.10; chec on Bank che q i jewelry, 82 ‘lllllm Rurritt Hotel alue unknown. PARTNERSHIP TOURNEY leading | and | opinion of Federal | | Three Snappy Billiard Games Staged Between Teams at Roge Recreation Alleys, Three good games were plo fast night in the partnership ard tournament at [oge n atlon rooms, The Kasprow-Pila | combination pulled out to de fthe Hans-Iritz team, 109 to after the two palre were 66 a Wolfe and McNeil beat O'Brien a | Neilson easily, taking a Dle lead at the beginning and ke ing it until the end of the Wolfe and McNell repeated by ating the Kasprow-Pilarsk) tea o) to 6 Next. 1 matches will be played: Team Team 7; Team 3 vs. Team $; Tea 4 ve. Team Team § vs. Team Team 1 vs, Team 3 and Team Team §. The standing, night's games, b | i m including ig as follows: Plurin - Brown | Wolte - MeNeil Afsenberg - Rossnberg Kasprow - Pllarski O'Drien - o Hans - Tritz 1.0 1.0 | ox., March 18 (4) T i ed highway in Tex; is ne speed lim signs as “Flivvers, do yo [best!" and, “Boys, let drive,” erected by a auto repair shop, lat intervals for thir | on which there | 8uch ive miles. The road is not a state highwa |but a private one, built by San A 'tonlo sportsmen. It leads to M dina lake, !sort, charg in the hills west of here, is made against cvery car enters and leaves the vicinity l(he lake. M. Shepard and August Berg- | $46,718 i3 repre $1,000; cash paid mortgage, Lander: benefit. | New Britain National bank, | four shar corporation, Are comforta gam sesday night the following V8, 2 vs last Flivvers Urged to Open {Them Up on This Highway | the girlg San Antonio greet the motorist a hunting and tishing re- | POSSIBLE BLAST OF M. WHINLEY Explover Plans to Find Oat if It Is in Eruption Anchorage, Alaska, March 13 (F— Alex Liska, Alaska gulde and moun- tain eltmber, believes it possible that Mt, McKinley peak may be in active {voleanic eruption, To find out he plans to ascend it, following the route taken by the late Archdeacon Hudson Stuck, who in 1618 scaled the heights approuching from the norfheast, Stuck described the ecrest mountain as containing a ¢ snow basin about twenty-five b sixty feet in dimension. He made his trip in company with Harry P K ens, Robert G. Tatum, u ml sionary, & third veteran of the Klon- | dike, and three Indian boys. On the summit, reached June 7, the instru. ment reading disclosed the peak to {be 20,800 foet above sea level, | The Stuck cxpedition made ity start March 17, nearly three months Leing requited for the ascent, I'ros | cceding by dog team from Nenana, & | month later camp was established 4,000 feet up at Muldrow glacter, IThis was twenty miles from the The remaider of the trip was more difficult, the greatest obs stacle being a steep ridge between and upper glacial floors o spectacular eruptions of sub. nean forges in the North in re- inging into belng the ousand smokes and phenomena, lends in- nder taking. WINS FIVE MILE RUN o= Yasily Leads Feld to Tape in In- door Meet Eyent. of od ng rik of the ater-lke ks o8 \|_ natural v n ep- New York, March 13 (Ph—Start- ng from serateh, I'red Wachsmuth Miilrose A. A. easily won the 6: | five-mile run at an indeor track meet of the 26Sth fleld artillery last night. Albin Stenroos of Fin- land, Olytapic marathon champlon jretived after running two miles and a half. Karl Ameri m ot a0 of the another second, Ko Finnis LA BARBA WINS BOUT Hollywood, € ch 13 (T)-~ IMidel La Barba, s flyweight champion scored a technical knock- out over Vie King, Australian bantamweight, in the fourth round of their scheduled 10 round bout last mu)\' 00 here \IOOD\ KAYOS ¥ I%HLR racuse, N. Y., March 13 (39 - Frank Moody of Wi middle- weight, last night knocked out “Caveman” Tisher of Syracuse, in (the fourth round of a ten round | bout. it. | ur | o SETS BOWLING RECORD Cleveland, Mareh, March 12 (P — Mys. Mae Russell set a world's bowli record for a single game in leagne play here last night with a 286 mark. A as | of | Unden to increase in ! pain interpreted t toward her, the to that the rouneed ingly v world iy a Germans impre reat of eplec Corth Churel Quintet Takes On Wind-o Locks Y. M. €. A, Team | # In County League Game, 1l team nent fo- | Windsor { mi Minnesota Legion Men I’ v for Twl(meni By payir pay 13 rionnaires, initinted seiation pay their T oregu- Eeauty Culture ERSONAL loveliness can be attained with the aid of our beauty experts. complexion, attractively A fine ar- ranged hair give to women that alluring appeal that is the secret of “lasting charm.” PPEAR always at your best — visit our salon at least once a week, PHONE 3984 FOR APPOINTMENT BARBER IN ATTENDANCE Milon Beauty Salon 99 WEST MAIN STREET Raphael Building Directly Off the Main Entrance Lobby