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GERTRUDE GIVEN ROYAL WELCOME Germans Turn Out to- Acclaim Girl Swimmer Dissingen, Germany, Aug. 13 (P— This Igtle village of 1,265 inhabi- tants is paying honors to Gertrude ‘ Ederle, the American girl, conquer- or of the English Channel, who is visiting her 75 year old paternal grandmother and looking over again the scenes where she played as a seven year ol¢ Trudie, as Mi erle is affection- ately known by her friends, arrived re last night, accompanied by her father and two sisters, after a tri- umphal p through Stuttgart, and neighboring villages. The vil- lagers here left nothing undone to evince their pride in the fact that a descendant of one of Dissingen's old residents bore the honor of being the first woman to swim the English Channel. The village magistrate in a pretty speech welcomed the Amer- ican girl; the firemen's band play- ed native airs: a choir sang folk songs and the air resounded with the “hochs” of the villagers. The climax of the day's events came as Gertrude saw her aged grandmother standing before the two century old “Sum Lamm' (Lamb's Inn), where she still lives and spends active hours in the gar- den. Jumping from the automobile in ch she was riding, Trudie rushed up to granny, hugged her long and hard, smothered her with kisses and beamed with joy as the old lady, with tears of joy stream- ing down her withered face sobbed. “T never dreamed the name of Ed- erle would achieve world fame.” Then the entire Ederle clan, ing most of Grandmother F 's twenty-one children, and her grandchildren and seven great- grandchildren held a reunion inside the inn. Gertrude greatly am tives with her com- used her rela- quaint mixture of Swabian dialect, into which she oc- casionally threw high German d ords. Grandmother Ederle y-one children, eight sons and eight daughters are still living, Of these three sons and one daughter are in the United Stat Ederle for ds ad kept the town in a state of feverish excitement. There were lengthy meetings of the l town's council and incessant rehear- I sals of the singing society, 48 strong. A brass band was commissioned for the occasion from a town. A huge placard bearing inseription “Affectionate Welcome vas raised in the main street of the illage. One hundred and fifty Chinese lanterns were ordered for e night festifities during the stay of the American girl in Blssingen. Gran fond rri mother Ederle is extremely of Trudie. Shortly after she 4 Gertrude related her experi- when she visited here r old girl, and when she putation of being - bays of the village in climbing trees. She laughingly told of how before the war she fell in a pond. “I nearly drowned then.” sald with a merry twinkle in eve. of the not only impart In Bottles PURE MALT VINEGAR PURR CIDXR TINEGAR DISTIL The taste R NPT i ) of whom | The coming to Bissingen of Miss | neighboring | able to | AD '"WHITY VINEGA2 Gertrude has not yet decided | | whether she will accept an urgent | invitation to give an exhibition swim | here. | Before Miss Ederle arrived at Stuttgart vesterday thousands of Swabians gathered before the rail- way station. She was greeted with a thunderous hurrah as she emerged from the station, dres travelling costume and smiling. shower of bouquets rained upon her while represe‘atives of the city council and athletic clubs welcomed | her. American flags were ed with the German colors through- out the station. The jourrey by automobiler to Bissingen was a centinuous triumph- al tour. In every village the native folk turned out to cheer her. Kirchain most of her relatives sur- prised Trudie by greeting her briefly land then joining the automobile procession to Bissingen. It was dark when the procession |reached Bissingen. Only |hall and her grandmother's Lamb's youths bearing torches flanked main street of the village through which the swimme~ proceeded to the home of her paternal grand- | mother. BULGARIANS WORRY ' OVER REGENT NOTE { Thinks There I Plot to Spoil Their Loan Plans | Sofia, Bulgaria, Aug 13 P The collective note of the little tente — Jugoslavia, Rumania | Greece — requesting Bulgaria | put an end to border raids by Bul- | garian irregulars, has dep - | Bulgarian official circles. Th {lief in these -quarters at | note, handed to Foreign Minister | Bouroff Wednesday. conc | preconcerted plan to bring nd to is about | the failure of a Bulgarian refugee mephitica family |10an. The opinion is that, althougt | communication cannot | terized as an ultimatum, | sents none the less a Tt is particularl | official circles that the note does {not mention eventual recourse to the league of nations or an inves- tigation of the causes underlying the frequent border incidents. The Bulgarian government, without lawaiting the receipt of the note, |said to have reinformed frontier posts and given strict orders to the authorities to prevent all clan- | destine border crossings. be ¢ it menacy remarked is General Todoroff has bee | er prefect of the dep: Petritch, which is ad frontier and considered by Jugo- slavia and Greece as a hotbed of revolutionaries. It 1s felt in official circles that states of | ought o help Bulgaria ficult task, notably by improvir the lot of the Bulgarians resident |in Macedo Thrace and Dob- |roudja, by permitting refugees to return to their homes and by help- |ing Bulgaria te obtain a loan to | pay the cost of repatriating refu- | sees in neighboring states. salad Just as the dressing:is the soul of the salad, so the vinegar is the soul of the dressing. Vinegar, at its best, should be more than simply a sour taste— it should be flavor, so that it will a goodness of its own, but also bring out the fine flavor of every food it touches. Heinz Vinegars are flavor because they are made from the finest ingredients and then aged naturally for over a year in wood. Long aging gives them a mellow- ness, aroma and body which quickly prepared vinegar cannot have. Ypu cannot hurry good vinegar along. HEIN PURE. ine Four Kinds: TARRAGON VINEGAR BEST FOR PICKLING is the test TR PR interwin- | the town | Inn were galy decorated, but village | the | in NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 1926. \FLASHES OF LIFE: BELGIAN KING WANTS TO MORTGAGE HIS PALACE ™" = “iome | Brus s—Mortgaging the home-| Albany — If an apple a day will | stead to keep the wolf from the |keep the doctor away, the Ameri- door is not confined to tl Wwhite ‘ ssured of a ye collar man. Albert, King of the |hes estimates indicate Belgians, has offered for sale his | > about an apple a | royal palace at Ostend to cut down [day for each of the more than | expenses establish fin Alwar could | bite and th [open he w \Wr.u lise st ‘-lxm an | sanskrit sto nd otland to | Isaac suc ess. B mamia We st Ora Bdison may | automobite 'nr 'II Sirthday the o phonograph, kel plat tools. Philadelp 1 no m ns, w 1e0p: r 1.an to be the without use captured a as a skunk. nd London — If the Walto The help nancial sta d brik ould uch tors Y. as T He er ma on and was un: an deer now to his ce £ 3 N t h fri ed inventor he hia hing tur ho he of age ard his net ole an his cou ability, Maharajah " to come ave a sportsman’s | oy romantic | s hired a river | thot mé preserve guarantee of wi ker Ar¥'s bration of the invention gave did 49 years Midas, a miserably starved for probate sh An yesterd animal spotted cat, of memb. yes rof th commonly 110,000,000 inhabitants, or 218,92 000 approximating 44 bil- {lion app At 5 cents each t of | Would bo worth 00,000.000. fish to| into the | busk s the Vt.—The fish of Lake good drink om Canada. | 000 bottle: uggled in a | and again | liquid into Albans. 1 importec conjured icers seized 10 | Customs o it could mulation = vy Bumpo to po! t into | raven- suicidal York ne, part of > i th Despite daylight sav- t descended and as well |as ov metropolis vesterday | four hours prem 47 nrely because of thunder ted tor- ts of r Conditions for ship g WOr: v'wn night ired all ts along coast and in t lax Thomas with content, 49th of the him a automobile id he | 180 A his pin fog obs - —A squaw with | more effective than ! hen it warpath g stampe Indian braves had lerms over many at to whose gold an Isaac himss ) years 1 d captivity full of to ants to re- al- with apples. a papoose of France, not the | besides con- odiriferous log A from ihe who is plan- lantic without a n highly fitted | mayors time had been his birthplace a Juickly resigned rew & reported to find Fad ad only that a job as the air most of t he r such e mephitis mvm {an honor, but had of Saucy seized by | leased by Bridgeport ball team sign- | N w London—Sloop Ella Cummin coast guard for technical Waterbury—Walter Torphy, re- ed by Waterbu e ‘*.‘*‘I,‘;‘,‘,‘L“i;‘””i?'YMexican Officials Say There | tied for medalist honors at Shen- | Have Been No Killings necossett tournament. | New Haver veral electrical | | storm caused damage in many parts| Mexico City, Aug. 13 (F—The de- | of state nt of war today denied the A i assertion of op Leopold Ruiz Y Flore the state of Mi dsor — Charles Powlaus | i of M Gl ed at by home Mer n Ri of the Church of Disci- | Windsor Man Is Killed wood, won gOIf tournam {ples socia rvice commission, re- i A - also .ntchmg on Lights ports of clashes : 3 (A—One metune Mover Returns | 2nd, soldiers n ¢ It is mort to Americans re- telephones {siding in Mexico,” says the state- of commission and con- Valuable Stolen Jewels | B s ey Nectrinis as done to fruit Aug. 13 (P —Mystery | 1 the state-|come € he truth and hout this state r theft of al- P ishop's re- |mislead the o u'n‘ of the American sult of a ere electrical jewelry, th 1 | press and people | which over Connecti- | o | ate yesterday Brior dovite from Mex-| Charles Powlauskas of Wind- s im s" passed | sor, s killed at his home when made known g on say believe a|h 1 to turn on an electric € nent m of education and social re- storm had short-cir- police was ety o0 Eha i ftatich isformer on a pole in venue residence | Mexico. We believe the Calles |fron house 1over who claimed | A arn owned by Willlam v ield was burned family it on July from al experts has t \ | 1 1 three diamond | the economic s -| Thompsonville, Aug. = \n,} g e o A iy otiexd) \lson B. Hanay, superintengent ot |Ellsworth Gets Share : floor: by one’ of the |protest against t S aetecia Ah 4, 2o se yast G \’ lfl 3 Million Estate ¢ NElanie retiatone ar|vears, resigned yesterday to accept| New Aug. 13 P — Lin- 5 s eric ik [ oalliond na siatendent ~ofcoln L‘.'s\\mnh, who flew over the e W lA RN Taxiso FOity S cane T e north pole with Amundsen and that t ms were of con-|continues nevertheless to o 2 Nobile, will share equally as a life he looked for t depression in b ss o Han th his sister, Mrs. Clare = mmer s Prentice, of Seabright, | Catholic Reply | nation in a commu > bulk of the $3,913,964 ( The Catholic Episcopate today in |vesterday morning by the «mmw.s ate left by his father, James W. sla statement made reply to re- | committee. He > to the Enfield | Ellsworth. An appraisal of the es- ewels have been port of the party of ri- | schools from a erintendency in [ tate was filed with the state tax “good willers” hea Han dark racee A new fur WE GUARNTEE YOU SAVINGS OF 20 TO 40% EACH COAT STYLED FOR THE 1927 SEASON SELECT YOUR COAT WHILE STOCK IS COMPLETE Ten of Our Many Outstanding Values FRENCH SEAL COATS A limited number of these smart coats to be sold at this low price. Fin BEAVERETTE COATS Correctly styled, new pelts lined with silk. This low m’i(v is made possible by our August Sale $75 See this coat. . FRENCH SEAL COATS mely trimmed with gray squirrel collar and cuffs. An outstanding value in our August Sale $115 MARMINK COATS In large sizes. coat at a small-s See these at. An opportunity to purchase a large-size ze coat price. $ 1 65 GRAY FOX COATS to KIns. 00N, 0 Resembles and wears like Tomboy models substitute raccoon. Beautifully marked $125 Purchases Held for Fall Delivery on Payment of Deposit No Storage Charge CINNAMON PONY COATS Trim-looking coat of flat fur. To be very popular next fall. Choice of beaver or fox collar. $l 40 Selling in our sale at. . JAPANESE MINK COATS A beautiful garment of beautiful fur. Soft, gracious lines and rich beauty make it a $420 much desired coat. Our sale price GRAY SQUIRREL COATS Trimmed with platinum fox collar and cuffs. Well- matched skins have been made into a smart, $450 luxurious garment. Our low sale price PERSIAN LAMB COATS A charming coat. Trimmed with mink collar and cuffs. This is a beautiful garment. Selling at an $450 attractive price in our sale CANADIAN (Labrador) BEAVER The extra fine quality pelts and perfect fashioning make this a superior garment. It is one of our $460 most beautiful coats. Selling at EDWARD ESHKE Est. 1896 170 MAIN STRLL'I. NEW BRITAIN WAR DEPT, DENIES STORY BY PRIEST —— IN ALL THE CITY NO SALE LIKE THIS! N M ICED "SALADA" Quenches thirst on hot days. fte d r ghining. wving been Eighty tons of stroyed anda horse and ber of chickens wene killed. $10,000, iy | ENFIEL D SCHOOL HEAD QUITS | loss was estimated at ord Springs. icommnsian yesterday. |f Here’s a Remarkable Fur Value 25 NORTHERN MUSKRAT Coats will have always We i s coats richly lars which we remarkably is quality 2 A Deposit Will Hold It Purchases Held for Fall Delivery on Pavment of Deposit No Storage Charge 58 CHURCH STREET, HARTFORD