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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, AUGUST 28, 1925 28, SATURDAY, uninjured. New Haven — Col. chins of Richmond Blues, told Le- gionnaires he could sée “nothing in prohibition but ultimate downfall of country.” SPARRING MATEY oSt Joha's Germian Lutheran Reformation Lutheran S ST —8:20 a. m., English serv-) Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity— | Stamford — “Regular” repub 938 0.5, Buiiny sohact: 1006|100 e merdgebs T © 0 O lloah wun bwo'to ams sictory in Ghamplofl Alter Two Week's s‘r‘rl:é.dri;man school. Monday evening, the teachers and | Primaries. ay—8 p. m., etin Sund c i Sty 5" e oroers o e i chonl Wil e saven ~regune repu | HATC WOk Ready fo Gat Loose licans carried all but four of 33 wards, defeating Willard faction. | Aglantic City |Jack Dempsey s country today for better and sturdier St. Matthew’s Lutheran Sunday—Service in English at 9 Trinity Methodist Sunday—10:45 a. m., sermon by New Haven — Mrs. Sophia Whit- a m., in German, with holy com-|Rev. Charles W. Barrett, “Popular munion, at 10:45; preparatory serv. |Religion and the Religion of Jesus|nteY: 80, dled after leap from second |gparring partners. iceqa! 10, Christ” Tenor solo by Mr. Barrett |StOTY Window. | The champion, after two weeks of Sunday afternoon, at 3:30, Pastor |“The Holy City"—Adams. | {hard work, is ready to cut loose. In Steege will preach at a mission festl. | At 3:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon| Waterbury — E. W. Goss defeat- |ract, he says he must it he is going val service in’ Southington. Mr, Barrett will preach at the| ¢ Harry B. Dow as republican can- it gitain the keen edge he will need ORThyineday, 15 Sautor Ll ageln | Hist8sila camp sroniis, lidate for senator in caucus. |\When he enters the ring in defense meet members for announcement, Tuesday 45 p. m., class meet- | of his titl ainst Gene Tunney i from 3 to 9 p. m. Neuman, leader. | Norwich — “Regular” republican | philadelphia, Sept. 2 Dempsey ST prayer | faction deteated opponents four 10 |wants top notch light heavyweights A. M. E. Zion | ; Henry Hoar, leader. e el and middlew who can open up Sunday at 9:30 a. m., Love feast ——— {with speed and at th time conducted by Rev. D. R. Overton of Prophs Gl ok Ohrtst Hartford — Police announced ar-|shoot punches at him 11l hav Torrington, Conn. Sermon 10:45 a.| Sunday—10:15 a. m. mo rest of Mary F. Hayes, negress 1n (o avoid from Tunney. m. by Rev. W, B. Carr of Spring- | prayer service; 10:45 a. m., mo Baltimore, Md., wanted in connec-|{ But wanting and getting new feld, Mnass, Addrems to Sunday|oworship subject: “L Yet Not Lr-|lion With murder of * Ross Hum- | sparring are two different school at 12:30 p. m. by Rev. Jacob | Sund L 15:15 5 . Evaning | PRFe® negro, on July 10 here, | auestions, vs of telegrams W. Powell, D.D., of Boston . Sermon |service, 7 p. m., subject: “Shut in | consisting of “no” in a hundred dif- — Telephone volunt South Covent; have rolled back to erators call members of op- | ferent phia: Dempsey’s Rev. S. W. Weller, | With God.” , Dresiding elder, of Middle-| Wednesday evening, cottage i town. Address to young people at|prayer meeting at Mrs. E. T. Jenni- | . department soon after midnight | Adams, a St. Louis heavyw 6 p. m. by Rev. George F. Green of |son’s, 187 White street, Hartford. | to save home of Constable William | heen asked to join the staff. Tommy Danbury, Conn. Sermon at 7:45 p.| Thursday—7:45 p. m. praye | J- Button. | Loughran, of Philadelphia, also is m., by Rev. Charles H. Hal | mee AT e e — sought iger Flowers, the middle- Danbury. = BReZ maeine sz Do EREESCH Bristol — Albert P. rk, \81, holders, was invited, bu eran of civil war, former regis- |firmly i Elim Swedish Baptist International Bible Students’ of vote constal | Dempsey realizes t with his Sunday—10:30 a. m., preaching| Sunday—Junior Bible class 10:15 _— | present st e must adjust himsel? by F. L. Asklund a. m.; Bi study 11:15 a. m., sub- ito hittin bursts, softening his Thursday—S$ p. m. prayer meet-|ject: “The Way to Life”; 7:45 p. m.,’P RI][]N | pun shock ab- ing. study at the home of Charles Henry, | sor his pace for 34 Dwight street, subject: “The the heavier ones. He must delibe First Lutheran Ixecutor of the ” | PR["‘E[;TS TRU[]Y tely 1 «‘T u‘mw ;“nsr':‘l(;vlty \;: in Sy y—10:3 roi snday— v peo-| ets fly with full force. Sunday 30 a. m, morning| Monday—7:45 . young peo e s Bible class, subject: scrvice will be in Swedish ple’s “Ransom | ¢ .) ’"‘ 1 unable to withstand heavy Rev. §. C. Franzen who has sup- and Restituti | : plied the pulpit during August will] Wednes m., praise, | (f » ishurient. s Dr. Abel Ahlquist and family are| Friday—S8 p. m. study at the| i g W""_“ e e e vected me om Newport . I, |home rles enry, W | . ap LR ,-‘ expectd Bome {rom Newport, R. T |bome of Charies Ko, 34 Dwient| SHIIMID Marvel Pleds | mempecy = ciear rond. Thers are next week. street. Text book: “Deliverance”, | b ton vs of earning $200 a week lin the boxi than working one New York, Aug. (P—New | round a day with Jack. They usually FLASHES OF LIFE: BLUE DIAMOND AT |0t bt i il 3 il o e 0 S turned from ng the now quict |three minutes or less, groggy, bleed- $300,000 ON SALE IN NEW YORK NOW e it Wit b me s, o y | tecting Gertrude Ederle of channel | Te Doutiatiil iy v s | swimming s et s fame from the outbursts |¥ Dempsey { T still have plenty nfre of time to work of her ce for some .’{‘;‘g““\jih "f;’ plays golt and | Of er O e daughter who was |into condition gradually. But there fpoloE . . lis no denying the truth that T need young man a great hit of her sex to swim from France |18 10 d0n¥ing T1e E0l0 Pl ) now with a girl. What is represented as - York — Touis B Mller of today wants to know |@CRL T P OFFICER the largest perfect blue dlamond gan Franeisco thinks he has beaten | D |these little fellows. Hope to get A. J. Sloper, President that " Tas ever come out of the he cross continent train time with | Vaudeville swimming, and motlon | oo 1oo”ang capable ones before (| ! er, Presiden i earth is on sale in a Fifth avenue taobile by ten Tours. Hig|Pioture ofer that segresate mearly |, s | F. 8. Chamberlain, Vice-President C. L. S'lfl\'t: for alnl ulc sftv<nf~\(‘_41). - was §3 hours, 12 minutes, or ‘ \\‘, Siitoe e ]{:\l[pu\rlr) ::J;\leiv\' Gunboat Sn the California | and Cashier DR CLb 2 by 1 9-32 inches. an average of more than 40 ) < : day shety o vweight, who fought two hard | S — an avorage of more (han 40 miles | rat that she nait s enoveh sbout 1L e to Dempey in | E. N. Stanley, Vice-President Newport, R. . — An official de- ing that traflic cops don't hmh“_‘ ne *wondertul time" she had in ac- | EN8 FI0 e Ccaw the nion | scription of gems stolen from the t [ ing an uproarious welcome fh: (4”‘ his six-round workout vesterday. | DIRECTORS home of Cornelius Vanderbilt T S | statesmen and sovereigns miBht, . qaq ot greatly impressed. The | . Dy D mentions, in addition to sund ite PI gy I'|f.'m1r“ v :\n‘l'}flwl lasted through most| o 4 that either Dempsey | A. J. Sloper E. A. Moore pearls, diamonds and rub a Godowsky and Frank M of the| o e oot | was not the same, or the n ty | N. Stanley A. G. Kimball lipstick badly ecratched.” movlea are no longer YEn iy IN‘" ons at the Publie 1 of nandling his inferior playmates | P S Chamberls i Sl NG ANt o [ R A s Ur | gently made him look bad. He sald | . hamberlain Georze T. Kimball New York — Peggy Je¢” 15 timony that when they had 2 el e e e e Eomer wer mbens L SR A. F. Corbin H. S. Walter mond bracelets, two solitaire rings, the husband of Joyce Hill, ¥ho N h iy e o lea | ctass of spa materia Maurice Stanley one ulcerated tooth and one sprain- got a divorce 24 hours later, | reached Forty-second strbet at Fitth | ring af the Greyhound racing 3 L gel s : tr nally built feet inside i b - 7 avenue, birds swooped Alm\n,‘n—‘,,:\ ropes by mis was recon- sne. had in mind on arval were New York — The common 1aw | cled overhead, and flew back to their |siructed overnight to 18 feet with a doctor and a dentist proves that SiHiRINinat A sarakay i an tH G big #tone) Bolla gL Chicago — Either Pete Sarmien o remove a public nuisance, An escort of 42 mounted and mo- Chicas Zith e armien- and o a broker tore down an ad- | torcycle police and patroimen num Phil Rosenberg cam't hit very train, A magistrate disagreed with |with her when she landed from “,{ rd. It took 30 smacks from him as to his deductions and held | Berengaria, and others attempted 10| Phil's right to send Pete down for him for tric [ ae o ths mvisins | thronss TA a count of four, If Pete were only | that yelled, threw ticker tape, and bigger he could get a job taking ew Haven — G mart, of | fought for a glimpse of today's idol. belts from Dempsey for $200 a \Vethersfield and J. Weth- More officers were added, 100 at o ; . | week. rsfield, became semi-fin: in in-|a clip when the crowd became un- Bmdgepofl Primaries Run mj itation golf tournament. controllable at City hall, where she New York — He gave away mil- — | was officially welcomed by Mayor I ‘l | lions and saved $10, The Rev.! Wallingford — Resolution of | Walker. When she started to leave P&dce llly Dr. Walace Buttrick was secretary Judge Downes at republican caucus | the building with a scroll presented of the general education board, & asking that delegates be instructed | by the mayor a mass of 10,000 per- N Rockefeller organization which to \o'»w for c;untxfi;u of l,p,m_"mv_l‘ ous pushed forward and she was| Stamford, Aug. 28 (A—The “regu- aids education. The appraisal of ernor Brainard defea sayed from being trampled by a {lar” republicans won overwhelmin his estate has just been filed. patrolman who picked her up and|ly over the so-called Lincoln repub 'Vl b f ! New Haven — Frederick Conwlin, | ran back into the building with her. |lican club faction 1h the republi Vlember o Paul Smith's, N. Y. — Presiden- 1, barber, committed suicide. Two other officers rushed Mayor primaries here yesterday, winnfug | F d 1 R . tial boots change sty with the Walker back to safety. ‘Jlmu\ 0 to one i edera eserve mods of exercise. Mr. Coolidge London — State police She was asked i she planned any | The * elected the entire || wore knee leather boots when ¢ places, made 28 arrests and | other swimming feat and aswered, |ticke Lincoln club failing _to System \aving in Vermont. Now it is hip selzed large quantity of liquor. at else is there to do? place even one candid The total boots when fishing. { g Dudley Field Malone, one of the Ivote was 4,599, a record for primar- | - | Thompsonville — Severe welcome committee, rc 4 that |ies in Stamford New York — Jeddu Krishna- storm Soemantoiis | damage she had ‘been offered contras’s The campaign was one of the murti is quite Ifer. He has cstimated at $50,000. amounting to more than $800,000, fmost bitterly fought contests in the be d in low as 77, he Al {he two largest being for $100,000 |history of Stamford. saye, Miss Rosalind Williams, who Branford — Alrplane forced down | ®a¢h- : ) loves him the same as any other causing some mage but aviators| I her own uptown neighborhood [ Bridgeport _A‘ u‘:’\ .‘Yl'.. 1)'" | she found more r‘rm\lvl; fla 53, \v:my- ae |-‘!,lw\lw Yotes icalt i ridge. - ing streamers with blazonec ¢l- | port yesterday at the most peace ..fw and flowers at the apartment | republican primary the city has wit- | €W l:’[‘?fl[fi:‘l‘?:;‘f!‘“\::\:‘0" B. Rurrows father's [nessed in years. There was no con- test in any district and in only two stricts was there evidence of dele- g being cu In the firs L. Wilder In her windows was a card- board, cheesecloth, and electric | model of herself swimming a very | choppy channel. In the evening police of her parent | sausage factor; FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST orted her - Wi i o | to a dinner given by city officials | Etta Chambers, second delegate, was Cor. West Main and Park Place at the Roosevelt hotel, and thence [glven 8 votes. James B. Banner-| o the “Tollies,” where a Broadway |man, president of the first district crowd estimated as high as 50,000 |independent republican club was In the third district 9 votes. Sunday, Aug. 29 gathered to watch her exit from the fgive ; i s B ter. Four calls wers made for |George Verrelll ran a voto ahead of Subject: “CHRIST JESUS police resarves to handle this crowd, |the other two ate appeal W. Goss In Waterbyry but it fell back only upon ar y S —9:45 | Mayor Walker. Waterbury, Aug. 28 UP—Repub- milay Sehovt#5k o AL [r?{;‘rnd\) s tired,” he s {Jican Town Chairman E. W. Goss I rening 1 i ’ R to go home, and so do I. won the nomination at republican Wednesday Evening Meeting—8 O clock ey © ohced pefore going home, | candidate for senator from the ‘:.x! i 5 Jati | however, and ft was not until early | district in last night's primarics Wy Reading Room—Room 504, National Bank Bldg. [|moming that she arrived with her|defeating Harry B. Dow, by & oI0 | : o oA T omar and mother, all still under [of 1,039 to 494, Delegates pledged Open daily from 12-5 p. m. Saturday 6:45-8:45 p. m. police protection, in at their|to the nomination of Mr. Goss were oartment, Nearly 200 persons were felected in all of the three ward SRl waiting to sge her, and this|comprising the 15th district. number swelled almost by magic to E Beats Out Opposition 00. i Several crowded past the door of | Norwich, Aug. 28 (M—By a four 3 the apartment. lto one vote in the republican caucus The Little Church Around the Corner “What? Yoy here yet? demanded | Jast night with 526 ballots case the Mrs. le candidates endorced by the town Just wondered Miss Ederle | committee for state convention del- PEOPLE’S CHURCH OF CHRIST COURT STREET egates beat out the four proposed the opposite factiom. The four were Dr. George H. had anything to say,” was the spons by nominated “Haven't I said enough she asked. “I've been talking all day.|Thompson, who was on both tickets, I've said everything. I've had a won- | Senator Lee Roy !’o\v\»\n? en 1\(’;\; “WOouU /OQU BE SECURE F ATE 79 derful time and it was thrilling, but |r tatives George G. Engler and WOULD YOU BE SECURE FOR ETERNITY? Seul e fpaantaiivis CROIES hione WBieac: ; “You can say good night” re-|cd were Charles W. Burton, John It is for you marked Mrs. Ederle. “It's the best | R, Bowman, Jr., and Mrs. Elizabeth Lathrop thing I knbw of to say at this hour.” The Ederle family plans to retreat to their summer home at Highlands, Convention In New Haven N. J., nest Tuesday. New Haven, Aug. 28 (P—Of the 114 delegates who will vote at the CHURCHES TO RESUME | convention tonight, 104 will be list- . . Practically all of the local ed in the Ullman fold, while the re F t Ch h f Chr t churches will have resumed their|maining 10, will be cast for the Wil e lrs urc 0 ls fall schedule after a summer lapse,|lard candidates. The total vote at § for for Willard, a or- within the next two or three weeks.|the caucuses was 5 Many of the ministers are expected |ganization and 3.41 home from their vacation September | plurality of 2 1, or shortly afterwards. Some of| The caucuses 11:00 A. M.—UNION SUMMER SERVICE when year last (South and First Congregational Uniting) the churches will resume Septem-|Mayor Tower's nomination was as- i 7 4 ber 5, and the balance are expected |sured were carried 26 to 7 by Ull- Preacher: REV. VINCENT G. BURNS to have resumed services by Sep-|man faction, showing a gain of tember 12. three wards for the organization W of Second Congregational Church, Pittsfield, Mass. Rurrows Nomirated New London, Aug. 28 (P—Prose- Let the Herald Clw;fled AdQ dept. help you o JEMPSEY SEEHING | never be sure nO\\'»a-days uals, contributing to their success, The Determining Factor There are many factors in business success—ability, training and the will to win—but the determining factor is usually that of 1ntelhgont hanking counsel. The NEW BRITAIN NATIONAL is identified with . hundreds of progressive and prosperous firms and individ- a‘nd quality of its service, but also by the character of the financial guidance which it places at their command. William H. Judd, Assistant Cashier and Trust Officer S. Parsons, Assistant Cashier Harold L. Judd ATIONAL BANK Without it one can not only by the scope Sheldon, Assistant Cashier J. B. Minor Walter H. Hart F. M. Holmes George P. {pear Oldest Bank in New Britain | H‘ republica tor from the n nomin 18th senatorial trict, comprising the city of w London and the town of Groton, hen he won the support of the senatorial delegation at the repub- lican caucuses in Groton last night. — 4 | Publlsh Itemlzed List | Of Vanderbilt Gems | New York, Aug. (G2 An itemized list of the jewels stolen TAKES LAST BITE OF ROAST from “The Breakers,” the summer REEF ON PLATE Lome of General and \n Cornelius lerbilt at Newport, August was made public md . The list was issued by William J. Flynn, for- mer chief of the United E service, now head of a private de- tective agency, and by Patrick L. Sweeney, chief of police of Newport. A reward is offered for the r of the gems, which have been vari- ously estimated as worth $100,000 to $300,000., Plane Is Forced Down | But Aviators Unhurt GETA{SRAIENT BD A5 Brandford, Aug. 82. P—A planc 10R FOR E0ODNESS SAK from Mitchell field and carrying QUICK WITH THOSE STRING BE l.lv'nh nant Batchelder and Lieuten- | AT | ant Peniels, who were and on their way to forced dowm here yesterday, land- ing in a small ficld. The plane crashed through a fence b the propeller and damaging wings. The army men were not hurt, on furlough Boston, was | Later a propeller was broug here aboard another plan, the wings were repaired and the men flew back to Mitchell field. BEGINS TO FIDSET €LOWERG ROUND TRBLE WATCHING EACH BITE DISAPPEAR. DR. DAVIS TO BROADCAST Rev. Dr. Ozora §. Davis, former pastor of the South Congregational church, will* conduct a religious U5 DOWN KNIFE AND FORK.IS SURPRISED TO SEE REST OF TAM- 1LY ARENT NEARLY THROUEH WIFE REQUESTS HIN NOT T0 H RY THE CHILDREN, NS HARD ENOUGH TIME MAKING THEM NEAVES SIGH OF RELIEF A LAST BITE VANISHES TROM WAST PLATE WAITS, $IPPING WATER, DRUMMI4| ONTRBLE AND WONDERING WRAT DESSERT 15 .- LAPSES NP SLEHTLY SULKY SILENCE It SHE HAS A SLOWLY AND CHEW THEIR FOQD FAMILY2 PAGS, UR Pmts TOR SECOND HELPS ©* service tomorrow. The service will 7 ; be brdadcasted from Station WLS, Copyright, 1926, by The Bell Svndicate, Inc, from the Chicago Theological sem- inary, of which he is president A weighinig machine, Jesignad for| use in shops, is so dne structed that it will weigh anything from a human hair to an article of 40 pounds,