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REPAIRI burning question is | =PARIS=—= Mary McCormie, Opera Star, Says She Prefers Type of Criticism Made by French Press. Paris, Aug. 14 (®—"If T am to be insulted, I prefer the rapler rather than the sledge- Mary McCormic, American hat is why I like French criti- added. hammer,"” opera star. sa cisms better than American,” she The petite Chicago singer is installed huge apartment overlooking Boulevard Pas- teur. Besides the flowers with which she fills this big salon, there are other personal touches—one an autographed photograph of | Gabriel d’Annunzio, the Italian poet. D'An- |nunzio in a scrawling hand wrote: “To Mary Melody McCormic, melodiously, Gabriel d’An- { nunzio.” Discussing the difference between American and French audiences at opera perforcances, Miss McCormic said: “In Paris the audience |is interested in the opera itself, while in America the star is ‘he principal interest. In other words, in Parls people go to hear the music, regardless of the singer, while in America people are interested in the personal- ity of the singer and care less about the opera. | "Miss McCormic is under a year's contract | | in a with the Parls Opera, but expects {0 leave for the United States in December, for a concert |tour, returning to Paris later. | | GOT REGAL WELCOME The Sultan of Morocco recelved a truly regal welcome in France, and the successor of the Prophet, Commander of the Faithful, was de- lighted. One of the stories told of his visit is this: Facing the then premier, M. Briand, across the banquet table at the Qual d'Drsay, Mulai Yussefffi, desirous of expressing his gratitude to the “Mr. Premler, you are my father.” The Sultan put all his heart in this sen- nce, which for a Moslem is the supreme ex- pression of gratitude. M. Briand received the compliment with all [the dignity befitting a premier of France, smiling and bowing to the Sultan. | But he confided in a low voice to'his table | neighbor: “Fortunately there are no ladies He makes me feel too old.” present | ALL GO TO CHURCH | _All degrees of motordom, from huge pol- ished ltmousines down through the ranks of the two-seaters to baftered motorcycles and sidecars went to church on 8t. Christopher’s Day in France, and several ceremonies Wwere held blessing them, with priests in full regalia. St. Christopher, as every motorist and most travelers know, is the patron saint of voyagers, |and his duties have been heavily increased since the advent of the motor car placed so many more under his protection. St. Christopher Jajolet, of all the churches named for the saint in France, is held to be the most ppwerful, and to this country church, six miles from the nearest- railway, motor { cars by the score were driven on this day that {their owners might have the protection of the |Saint for the coming 12 months. In a long |line, automobiles of all sorts passed before the statue of the Saint, some decorated with |flowers and others merely with dust. Fach wae blessed by Abbe Thuau, Those automobilists who could this special ceremony went to Christophers, less famous but still with power to protect them. not reack other | credited NEW DEPUTIES GROUP Deputiés without fortunes” belonging to all parties h formed a group in the French chamber, with a soclalist as president, an- other soclalist and a radical-socialist as vice- | president, and a radical-socialist, a republican | democratic unionist and a member of the |radical left as sccretaries The group has decided to bring forward a |bitl, which the government will be asked to |vote before the summer holidays, introducing ja sliding scale for salaries of state employ |and fixing the coefficient at three as the | minfmum for all etate salarles as compared rench government and its chief, saidg EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1926. DOINGS IN FOREIGN CAPITALS et R INroemey Many of Old-time Royalty in Ger- many Have Died During Past Few Years Berlin, Aug. 14 (®—Berlin’s dog days find married couples indulging in a new-fangled substitute for the crossword puzzle. This is probing into the mysteries of the figures $852. Someone discovered that these figures in- variably come from adding the following: The vear of one's birth, one's age, the year of marriage, and the number of vears married. The puzzle, which is bewildering to most people, rests on the obvious fact that 3852 equals twice 1 and that the year of birth, plus present age always equals 1926, as does also the year of marriage plus the number of years of the duration of the marriage. WILL STUDY NURMI'S STYLE Runners soon will be able to study closely the training and running methods of Paavo Normi, “The Flying Finn.” During the champion rufne hibition races in Berlin, a film company ir duced him to pose for a one-act reel. This is soon to be exhibited. Nurmi, who is of & retiring disposition, at first was unwilling to be “shot”, but finally he n he was convinced that he would render a service to other devotees of the cinder path, Slow motion pictures, with which the film abounds, will enable aspiring athletes to study the champions every motion and observe the beauty and exactness of his stride, MANY OLD ROYALTY DIE About 25 per cent of the heads of former royal houses have died since federal and pro- vincial governments in 1918 were drawn into negotiations to indemnify them for property confiscated during the revolution. The monarchist slogan, tle with former princes and kings before they die,” has @ basis in fact, although all the rulers who have died left heirs who are continuing the fight in the half-dozen states and principalities which have not settled after eight years. The delay, now prolonged until the Reich- stag meets again in November, is costing the governments millions of dollars annually in pensions and rents on property held. The former Kaiser alone draws a etipend of $144, 000 a year. A few of the ex-rulers are land poor. Prince Johann Georg of Saxony, brother of the former King Friedrich August, has been forced by circumstances to sell his Dresden palace and estate to the city for $1,- But most of them are holding out and it is believed they stand of getting about half of the which they demand. recent es PLANS TRIP IN LITTLE BOAT A free man after spending 22 vears of his life in jail for burglary, Paul Mueller is attempting to realize the dream that came to him behind the bars. He wants to cross the Atlantic to Brazil in a 40-foot flboat and start life anew as a farmer. A subscription fund started by a Berlin news- paper has netted him one thousand marks so far. “All T want is enough to buy a boat, pro- visions and navigation instruments,” Mueller “I can't get a job in Germany. Every employer wants recommendations. I can show only fail releases. My last sentence was 13 < en if T get a job the government expects me to pay back cents a day for my keep in ‘jail, or about $1,760. I can’t do that.” of the 40 ANTI-MASHERS' DEVICE An anti-mashers’ device, which looks like a wrist watch and can knock out an assailant by means of a low amperag ectric shock of 1,600 volts, is being recommended to girls by a number of policewomen. LONDON Trade Union Thinks Wives of Mem- bers Should Be Given Voice in Or- ganization Activity London, Sug. 14 (A—*A sort-of political and administrative Pooh Bah,” is .an Eng- lish newspaper's characterization of the sec- retary of state for Scotland, Sir John Gil- mour. His duties, are of a far more varied character than those of any other minister. He combines the functions of a minister of education in regard to Scottish educational matters, a minister of agriculture in connec- tion with Scottish farm affairs and a minls- ter of health so far as Scottish health mat- ters are concerned. All this is in addition to the various minutiae in other hranches of Scottish administration to which he has to attend, Almost every day the House of Commons is sitting he is bom- barded with questions from inquisitive Scot- tish members on such widely varied subjects, as the reasons for the dismissal of an officer from the Argylishire police force; how many men are employed in the Lochaber water- works construction; why the Carnwath parish council is refusing to extend relief to able bodied destitute persons, and similarly highly Jmportant questions of state. All told the secretary of state for Scotland has a job on his hands that would secm to go far toward justifying the paragrapher's appellative, TO MUZZLE BARKERS A muzzle is shortly to be applied to ex- ponents of a pecularly British form of indus- try—the business of the oratorical tipster on the races. These human loud speakers have been holding forth in numbers for some time the outskirts of London’s popular open-air debating ground, Hyde Park, and their noley | and voluble career has finally been adjudged a nuisance. The government bill in Parliament which provides that any person delivering a speech or ad- dress imparting information concerning bet- ting or racing, “or advertising that such in- formation can be obtained elsewhere, sshall be liable to a five pound fine. The Office of Works was rather apologetic in commen#ng on this measure—an abridge- ment of the traditional British liberty or speech. An official expressed dislike at “mak- ing rules that interfere with the llberty of the subject,” there had been an undoubted abuse of lib- erly, as the number of tipsters had so in- creased as to constitute an annoyance to the public. SPOKEN WORD IN POETRY John Masefield, poet and novelist, finds iittle encouragement these days for the spoken word in poetry. Addressing those who gathered for the yearly verse-speaking con- test at the Oxford Examination Schools he hemoaned the preference of the new genera- tion to sit in a dark chamber watching flashy | rather than listening to poetry beauti- | Aims fully declaimed. Poefry in this form was nearly done for, he mourned, but it would persist to some de- gree despite everything. . “So long as thers remain two enthusiasts and a plank there will be a poetical stage,” he deelared. ONE ON THE REPORTERS Miss Gertrude Kingston, the actress, thinks she has a good joke on the ship news re- porters at New York. “The last time that I was there,” she says, “the newspaper men told me that if I would tell them things about Shaw, Masefield, Wells, and other celebrities they would be careful to keep rigidly to what I said. I mentioned that Mr, Shaw was not a coid-hearted man; that he has helped many a lame dog over the stile. muzzling ordinance is embodied in a| but explained that in this case| National Parks, Scenes of Historical Indian Fights and Relics of Pioneer Days There for Passihg Tourists. | Denver, Aug. 14 (A—The Rocky | Mountain region furnishes | wonders in great profusion. Approaching from the East the motorist crosses sandy wastes or great clay beds in the Dakotas and through the great plains of Kansas |and Nebraska. The Bad Lands of | North Dakota are great stretches of | sand without vegetation while in the | southern state the Bad Lands con- | tinue in large flelds of gumbo clay. | The latter are unlike the prairies in | that tHey do noh roll gracetully, but | are flat and cut here and there with jagged lines, | Where History Repeats, | The Black Hills of South Dakota were the setting for the adventures of many old time frontiersmen, in- | cluding Wild Bill Hickok, sheriff of | Deadwood and Deadwood Dick Here also is the Homestake gold | mine at Lead, 8. D., which was dis- covered 50 years ago, and still yields | $6,000,000 a year. Yellowstone Park is included within Wyoming and at this season attracts Wwith all its glories. Roads for private cars traverse the park and special tours and other accom- modations make its wonders avail- able to all. | Roughing It In Luxury. Wyoming also is noteworthy for | its cattle ranges and “dude ranches” | where tenderfcet are initiated into the “great outdoors,” and rough it in comparative luxury unknown to the older settlers of the country. Once in Colorado, there is & be- | wildering choice of historic and | scenic spots ranging from the Grand | Canon to mountain ranges, but none of them under 3,350 feet above sea | tevel. Denver itself is a city of contrasts. A morning game of tennis in balmy | weather may be followed by a | skiing party on glaclers above the | ety in afternoon. Pikes Peak, rising to 14,100 feet above sea level, commands the en- tire state, and served as a gulde post |in the gold rush of *49 to Callfornia, and in '59 to Colorado. | National Parks. Rocky Mountain National Park is ered through Estes Park, seven- | ty-five miles north of Denver. Here Lord Dunraven, who recently died in gland, entertained his British triends while the Utes and Araphoe Indians still disputer the invasion by white men. The first apartment house dwell- ers are commemorated in Monte | Verde National Park, in southw | ern Colorado where their cliff dwell- ings, the largest containing 200 rooms, still remain. ©ody Buried in Rock Tomb. Col. William F. Cody lies in a rock tomb blasted out of Lookout Mountain at a spot v | the smoke signals of the Utes. | Clear Creek Canon and others | nearby retain their evidences of the | gold rush fever, while scattel | throughout the Colorado Rockies are scenig ROCKY MOUNTAIN REGION ABOUNDS IN WONDERFUL SCENIC MARVELS ifln‘l (Buffalo Bill) | re he often stood watching for | Those arrested were Tynan, who was charged With violation of the liquor law and operating gaming devices, and George Zachary _and Daniel Haley, charged with viola- tion of the liquor law. The men were released on bonds and will be given court hearings August 16, Tynan was sentenced to 120 days | in joil on two counts last April and | the case is now under appeal. A | year ago he was convicted of a liquor law violatlon dnd served 15| days in jail. FRENCH VETERANS DENY ANTIPATHY | | Insist They Wil Welcome, Kmerican Legion Next Year Rockland, Me., Aug. 14 (P—The | declaration that antipathy toward | Americans does not exist among the | French veterans of the World war, | was contained in two cablegrams | from the French minister of foreign | affairs received here last night by | the France convention committee of the American Legion. | The messages were in answer to querles sent the French government by the Legion in regard to the at- titude of the French people to-| wards the proposed Legion conven- | tion to be held in France nekt year. | One of the cablegrams said: | “Inasmuch &s certain newspapers | in America have circulated hostile | rumors, you have inquired of the| French government what may be | the attitude existing in France in | regard to the convention of the| American Legion. | “The comite d'entente and the| semaine du combatant have inform- | ed you that members of the Ameri- | can Legion will be recelved with| enthusiasm by their comrades. You ' may be assured, that for my part the coming to France of your mem- | bers, placed as it is above all con- troversy and all political problems, will be considered as a friendly and courteons visit and a sacred pil- grimage to the graves of American soldiers who rest in France. There | is not a Frenchman but will greet your membhers as they pass and kneel with them on these graves.” The second message denied ru- mors of a hostile attitude on the | part of the French veterans. It said, in part: Representatives more 000,000 French ans and vie- | tims of the war formerly deny the rumors {ending to create the im- pression that France does not want | the convention of the American Le- glon to be held in Paris in 1927. “On the contrary French veter- | ans rejoice to have the opportunity | to show their American comrades | that for them lasting comradeship brotherly affection remain al- | v8 above the material consider: tions. “Recent inciden passage of forcigners isolated cases and They do not reflect public opinion | which remains lovally attached to | the friendship of America.” of vete than during the have been insignificant. | to SEMFINALS AT EASTERN POINT Marston, Mackie, Brainard and » Hancock Feature Eastern Point, Conn., Aug. 14 (P —The select of the field of 250 starters — so selected because of their individual golfing powers — were to get away today in the semi- | finals of the seventh annudl men's amateur golf tournament Shenecossett country club. The stars whose drives were straight out and long and whose putts holed through in the two pre- liminary rounds yesterday are Max Marston of Philadelphia, former national amateur ® champion, Jack B. Mackie, Inwood, L. I, former New York state junior champlon, Spencer Brainard of* Branford, Conn. and F. M. Hancock of Provi- at the | dence. Today Marston was to drive off with Mackie as his opponent and Brainard was to try the mettle of Hancock. The finals, 36 holes, come tomorrow. Mackie was the mest impressive rounds. Both his opponents were badly beaten, 7 and 6. His drives were well nigh perfect and his long putts were as sure as his short ones. On the morning round he was out in par 36 and was one under par for the nine holes in the after- noon. Brainard in winoMg his second match on the home green went the 18 holes in one over par 72. On the outward journey he played every hole, except the fourth, at par. Coming in he took two more than par on two holes, but got birdies on two others to make the nine holes in par 36. Marston played his begt golf in the second match but he had sev- eral bad holes, requiring 78 strokes for the circuit. Hancock won both his matches on the 17th green, two up. . SAVES CHILD FROM DEATH UNDER WHEELS OF TRAIN Westficld Woman Accuses Man in Drunken Rage of Placing Her Baby Girl on Tracks . Westtield, Aug, 14—Edith Bl drich two, daughter of Mrs. El- drich of 43 Thomas street, was saved by her mother from being run over by a train on the New Haven division of the N. Y., N. H. & Hartford railroad at ahout 4 o'clock vesterday. James Easton of 41 Me- Chanic street is booked at headquar- ters on a charge of drunkeness, al- he is charged by the mother as be- ing the one who took the child and placed it on the rails just before the 3.50 train was due south. 4t is alleged that Easton has been | drinking heavily of late and that he went to the Eldrich home, where he started to annoy the mother of the child. It is alleged that he tried make an engagement with the woman and when repulsed flew in- to a rage, and as revenge grabbed the child and ran with it to the railroad tracks. The mother w: quickly at his heels and succeeded The contrivance, of Gelsenkirchen, is worn en the wrist. wi duction coil carried in an inside pocket of & dress or the res connect it with coat ne€ded the wearer pr the bad man =0 as to touch his body, and the fight is over. TH 1E FIV - The five-cent cigar long ago, anything. Jokes invented pocket of a but smokers s: about by Emil Pruess ,q saving that Mr. Shaw regularly gave away| Thin three-fitths of his income. a tiny battery and in- | WOULD INVITE WIVES | Wives of trade unionists should be invited to attend meetings of their husbands’ union whenever questions of policy are to be dis-| cussed, tn the opinion of the executive com- mittee of the Liverpool Amalgamated Build-| ing Trades Union, which had adopted a rec- ommendation to this effect. Miss Florence Underwood, secretary of the Women's Freedom League, probably was not When ngs at man. es a button, ewi T many it doesn’t mean the five-centers being The next day I found muyselt reported | more than 1,000 mineral springs. State Police Make Raid On Store in Middletown Middletown, Aug. 14 police from the Hartford harracks accompanied by Middletown police ed a place conducted by FEd- ard J. Tynan avenue last night, seized two pitch- crs of liquor and two slot machines and made three arrests. w Middletown Youth Drowns | In East Hampton Lake East Hampton, Aug. 14 (P— Charles E. Davis, 2nd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis, of Middle- town, was drowned in Lake Poco- topaug last night while bathing. He was 25 years of age and was connected with a lumber company conducted in Middletown by his father. The body was recovered. 1t is belicved he struck his head on a stone while’ diving fram a pier. in saving the baby. An the police and ther had rescued the () — State than drunke: 41 Rapallo against the prisoner. City of I'lowers. emergency call was sent to Inspector O'Brien was sent, but arrived after the mo- child. He placed Easton under arrest and took him to police headquarters. It not known whether any other charge ss will be brought is Tlorence, Italy, is known as the THE | i | |with pre-war rates. solved without an effort Bubntlen wiil te tesatsd 8a/btate emplovss X b 59 cder | |under this bill so that their indemnity would when you call 529 and order become 45,000 franes (about 1,200 dollars) a some of our dependable fuel. | |vear, or three times the pre-war rate, instead | |of )00 francs (about 700 dollars) as at filled with cast-off automobile tire rubber have caused the federal take notice. entirely serious however when she recently and state governments to advanced the idea of going a step further,| An institute for tobacco research suggesting that the wives attend as proxies| has been organized to promote the growing of tobaeco at home bocanse the high taviff virtually excludes high grade woods from the market. “Husbands could then stop at home and| mind the children while wives attended meetings," the | Paramarido, Dutch Guiana, where UNITED COAL JIGGAN ARRIVES in the last month or six weeks quite a distinct improvement in this in- | they arrived on June 11. | | dustry has been noted. | ments have been working together on the plans for the proposed and WOOD CO. Cor. East Main and Wilson| Streets | — Telephone 529 — | §500,000 First Mortgages At Low Rates of Interest on dwellin apartment houses ' and business wted struetfon loans in Hart cential buta tora property “ictnity, Thie present and appraireme: any ro-fir ortgages on favorable term» ean nce your « biigation First Bond & Mortgage Co of Hartford 805 Main Wt 3-5073 Kl - cid e ———— DRIVE YOURSELF— NEW CARS TO RENT an_hour——10c. a mile. HOLIDAYS, w mile g trips/ DAYS AND 25¢. an hour—15¢ Specinl rates for You-Drive Auto Renting Co. y K Cor. Seym : READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RESULTS for a | routes, two of which have been ap- [ for their husbands, for she added: k | | | _ [their plane w After leaving Paramarido for ]Pn 1, Brazil, they disappe Extensive search was made for them, but it was not until June 20 that they were reported at Vigia in the state of Para. They had been {forced to descend near the island |of Maraca off the Brazillan coast tand were picked up by a fishing | boat. | The flight was resumed July 2 and the aviators made steady pro- down the ez | America making daily hops of and 400 miles, They were again held up near Rio Grande do Sul for re- | pairs, but persisted and reached | their objective, AGRICOLTURE 15 " BiG WEAK SPaT jSecremy Hoover Is Giving This His Attention Smith’s, N. Y., AT BUENOS AIRES Gompletes Trip From New York in Seaplane | Buenos ardo T man, ires, Aug. 14—(P—Ber- 1ggan, Argentine sports- his two campanions, who began a flight from New York to Buenos Aires on May 24, arrived at their destination at 3:53 yesterday afternoon, Arriving from fliers completed a ried them about in flying ress and the car- dis- 114 Montevideo, trip which 13,000 kilome actual flylng time was ds welcomed the sorted to the where they nt Alvear. Immense crow | aviators, who were es | zovernment house, | received by Pres| | Bernardo Duggan, Argentine | jortsman, had hoped to make the ew York-Buenos Aires flight in wecks, but poor weath- | er, ccidents and a delay of several weeks in South America held up the flight. Duggan, who is a wealthy sport ¢hthusiast, was ac- mpanied by Capt. Eduardo Oliv- | ero, an alr ace, and Lieut. Ern- situation, are re esto Campanelli, the mechanic whe | attention of the federal government, | accompanied Francesco de Pinedo |which 1s working to bring them up on his notable flight from Rome to | (o the general economic level | Tokio. Their seaplane was Itallan | As regards agriculture and its built. problem of fin it was said offi- Met Storms and clally yesterday at the executive of- he fliers left- Miller flces after Mr Hoover's confere | Island, on the morning of ['with the president, that some work and flew down the coast | was being done toward drafting ten- stages reaching Miami on May tative plans for helping the’ farmer They were forced back by storms on |by endeavoring to coordinate the their next hop to Hava but different agencies that extend credit | sumed on the 29th, resching Cuba [to him, notably banks, mortgage the day. At Port au Prince |concerns, and insurance companies. y were held up again when | The cotton manufacturing busi- s damaged in strik- |ness, it was asserted, is now enjoy- ing a pler. They reached Porto Rico |ing the benefits of readjustments on June 3, and continued south to'which, Mr. Hoover has eftected, and were bout three several Paul 14— Agriculture and the textile industry, Aug. sarticularly cotton, regarded by See- ry of Commerce Hoover as weak in the generally excellent busi- ret spot ne Accidents tield, Staten May in easy 26. re- same | Haiti, ti t coast of South | iving the close | Details of the administration’s ef- | [ forts to assist agriculture and tex- | | tiles were not disclosed. In addition to discussing with President Coolidge the important| | steps which the nation is about to | take in establishing a chain of na- | | tional airways for commercial fiying, | | Secretary Hoover also sketched the foreign trade situation for the chief | executive. He reported that Ameri- can exports of manufactured goods | | were 12 per cent greater than | Tast | }"r';"r"j“"u’l’i's" oo e B of Pre-War| for utilization of the contract ai | ere 57 por cont mare then thalore. | mail service between Fort: Worth : 8 re than the pre-|noyas, and Chicago, IlL., for the fast | war total. Imports, Mr. Hoover in | tormed the president, were 37 per|éXchanse of mail betwesn the two countries. cent in excess of shipments before | the conflict. | Air mail addressed to Mexico City Mr. Coolidge and Secretary Hoo. | UPOR reaching the border, would be ver, 1t was learned, did not discuss | handled by rafl as special delivery | to any extent the possibilities of the | TMAter upon whicls the Mexican development of commercial aviation, | POSt office would levy no additional They were rather concerned with |Charge. the immediate problem before the | department of commerce of map- | ping out routes, licensing pilots, pro- vide landing flelds, and encourage commercial fiying National Afrways. | 1 In connection with the govern- | | ment’s plans for an extensive sys-| tem of national airways, which ul- timately will cover the country, President Coolidge will appoint two |advisory committees. One will assist |in laying out the air routes, and will work with the assistant secretaries |of commerce, war and. navy. The other committee will help the- com- merce department in drafting rules | for aerial navigation; inspection of planes and licensing pilots of the national ~ airways. The commitiee will be composed of representatives of commercial .flying concerns and of the military and naval aviation | services. Aside from providing an ultimate passeriger. express and mail service, the proposed utilization of the na- tional air routes by privately owned | planes_will give the nation a new and important line of defense in the | opinion of Secretary Hoover. The commerce, war and navy depart- proved by President Coolidge. One of these will cross the country from New York to San Francisco and Los Angeles. The other to be known as the southwestern airway, will be laid out between Chicago and Dal- las and Fort Worth, Texas. Mr. Hoover believes they will be in use within six months. last night that arrangements have been worked out by the Mexican and United States postal authorit The alphabet of the Tartars con- ns 202 letters. The worlds largest selling Paste Hand Soap~Highest n QUALITY for 2) years KAT It was announced in Washington | The Early Start OW much further ahead would you be today if you had an earlier and better start? You have probably asked yourself this question often enough, and are doing your best to give that B son of yours a better start than you had. Why not open a savings account for hi in responsibility and sense of money values. With regular de- posits and liberal interest, the money will grow as fast as he does. Start him off with a $1.00 deposit today. THE CITY NATIONAL BANK OF NEW BRITAIN * Main at East Main President—Paul K. Rogers Vice-Pres.—Joseph F. Lamb Cashier—Francis C. Kelly Asst. Cashier—Harold L. White m? It’s an ideal training