New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 4, 1926, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1926. ) POVERTY IN MILLS HOME FORCES MOTHER TO ENGAGE IN DECEITS GERMAN ATHLETES Charlotte Describes Their | Ambitions and Disap- | HeroouARTERS ' for... CHOOL SUPPLIES Stationery Dept. The Dickinson Drug Company 189-171 MAIN STREET She her thou I would confided in me and ghts and how sh ve “some kind ture.” She 1 to beg m marry anybody until I loved him and that he was kind of man. “Be something, ki “have some kind of as I've had to. d me?” And T did ung Every once in would g up the house a ways there we 1o anything. . why we wante er and I would go her day pointments Because of | Lack of Money. sa al Famous Inc.) previous Features ndic | (Copyright 1 tand L&, while (Editor's Notc sorbing chapters M Charlotte Mills, daughter slain woman in the Hall-Mills mur- mystery, has told of her earl life in her drab little home in New Brunswick, J. She had related |how her mother turned to the church for consolation in her life of Today she tells of the bonds friendship be- mother and Rev. Edwar whom she met her fate New J ey farm) little bet n't Father der inythin we saw the a fra picture ¥y drudge ol It shows a little boy his back on a hillside, with one hand and ght up into the sky, hat is just lik; mother told me. *“He has how he used to try to thir ont when he was a boy He tried to think out what growin en he 1, with on a lonely eves stre d GROWING UP I used to have strang about my father. I don't father for not making money. Peo- ple have to be as they are, I sup- pose. But I used to wonder why he | had so little education. Schools were | frge. You could always study and {read and find out things if you worked at it. Mother dic I rer ser once she came hom from & Ladies' Aid meeting or som thing and said she had heard she dic and. It was “) pah,” a went right away to look it up in the dictionary. Then she hunted for it in our encyclo- | pedia. She came back and told me itwas the name of a holy place men- tioned in the Old Testament, and that the word got to be used later as a sort of ‘“good bye sentence” meaning “The Lord be with thee and me while we are absent one from another.” | We both thought that was beau- tiful. { As I grew up, feelings blamg two siste didn't a for his for he wanted thin, moth and they things." Mother bought that went, and whi ave it to Mr. it up in his study ind said it n hoyhood Later on, ! part pay it all, hur ch ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. John F. Keaveny HAS EQUIPPED A DENTAL OFFICE AT 321 Main St. Where He Will Conduct a General Practice of DENTISTRY vd his back. he back to mother our room. I ha it now. Mother and I had one my father and Dan anoth bed n't comforiable so stores charged so mue I'll never forget the d th ered it, with the n everything. Mother the garret, and didn't ¢ down till it was all pald fo of what father would from experience. 1t troub trouble, money. We used to get sick over rels, Onee we had a wicker chair, mother was more 11 |and more my chum. She was only | 17 years older than me anyhow, and we had the same way of looking at | things and the same likes and dis- likes, only she was smarter. She had a lively mind. She loved to read about people and countries and she would always be imagining what Europe looked like, and even Japan and China. She used to make up stories about places and tell them to me as if they wero really try nd then laugh “Oh, I'm just making it up; to think about it.” Things at our house got worse, or | at least they seemed wo perhiaps because geiting old enough to re wore and how W My father was a shoe-cutter a he had been working in a tory in New Brunswick. It moved to Brooklyn and they wanted father to o along. o would have gone, but mother wouldn't leave New Bruns- wick. It was her home, and her family was there | her friena. But most 1 to leave the church. the church » had nothing else but drudgery and disappointment, not a ! | She told father he could go | to Brooklyn and she and I would stay in New Brunswick and he could come out and see us when he w ed to. DENTIST f Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. f Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN | was an awful t — or and I saw a wicker cl store window and wanted but mother didn't have eno to an_instalment. Well, anyhow, enough out of money to make a paymen got the chair home. Whe 1 for at last, we br wn—and then the he near fell That night mother and over to the church and sle Hall' dy. In two cha mother and T got quarrel wanted me to sleep in the fortable chair, and I want & it. We ended up by b ing in the bi and me the other half! That wasn't the last tim We did it a good ms hever there were 1t home, and v there un ELECTRIC TREATMENTS When given in connection with the Ultra-Violet Rays, Alpine Sun Rays, Electric Light Baths, Electrical Massage and Biolog- fcal Blood Wash Treatments control all nervous conditions— Coughs and Chest Discases, Heart, Stomach, Liver and Kid- ney Diseases, High or Low Blood Pressure, all forms of Rheuma- tiam. Including Neuritis and Sci- atica, or regardless of what ati- ment. These treatments are a God-send to the afflicted and to weak, slow-growinz children. Dr. F. Coombs NATUREOPATH 19 So. High St., Near Post Office Lady nurse in attendance Tel. 765 g oo o) was ze how badly off we hopeless everything hoe she said, and all didn't want k was she ‘American Sailor Faces Murder Charge Abroad London, Sept. 4 (P)—A coroner's ury yesterday returned a verdict of wilful murder inst Emanuel Smith, a gunner'sc mate on the American destroyer Lardner at the inquest which was held into the death of Emile Parades, a negro sallor from the American destroy- er Sharkey. The men were involved in a row in a Gravesend dance hall last Saturday night. Evidence at the inquest today was that Parades declared before he died that Smith bad shot him. The coroner issued | a formal warrant for tha arrest of | Bmith and his committal for trial. | Smith is now a prisoner aboard the destroyer Sharkey which salled for San Sebastian, Spain, Tuesday night. The American officers had erfused to send ashore for trial the men involved in the fatal mele PIEfErAInE 5 judge and puni them themselves. her wouldn't go without us. T really think it was my brother Dan more than mother and me. He al- ways cared tremendousiy for Dan and so have all the Mills family. | Perhaps Dan is more like them, and mother and I are like the Rein-| hardts. Anyhow, we never could get along very well with the Millses, We | always felt somehew they thought of us as German, and I know they think everything glish is simply perfection. In these days T had more and more understanding of mother and how dreary her life was and how she was at heart. She never a chance to be happy, mother dn't. Just housework and being poor, and father having no ambition | or ideals or anything she cared for, and us children to bring up, and no | future, and she wasn't strong. (Monday: C lhow she begins mother and Re other. relates how her recovers from an almost ne be e the rector ple he must get well for his | presents, too, a vivid pictu stern Mrs. Hall.) NORWALK MAN SLAIN IN arlotte M to suspeet Gustody Norwalk, 4 times in the <t, | hips, Giocomo Bertino, 33, 4 groc in the Norwalk h His alleged r is Rocco ¢ |vanni, who is the owner @ | taurant in Mulvoy street. The shooting is police to have re leggers' feud. engaged in an and Mulvoy strects during the quarrel, San pulled a revolver from hi |and fired six shots at Bertt | bullet entered the left sid chest near the heart, ) through the hips. After the shooting ran to his restaurant the gun in th lar. ¥ | made his ese The found later and is being hel police Sept P che of the money you earn— weekly, monthly or peri- odically—should remain in your hands and belong to you permanently. 1 in men argument Jast nl Ite How much? San wher: We have set down an an- swer within everyone’s reach in our booklet— Daily Dividends and Howto Get Them Ask for it, read it, and adopt this plan san Patrolman night, the restaurant Giovanni Henry policeman man hiding was capt Webb 1 in s attracted ng in the b S Giovanni polic quarters said he shot Bert attempt to get the latter claimed Bertino had th den in his shirt | ment man Webb wa | spot by a ru WILL SF Fitchburg, lant of the Grant Cleghorn, valued at nearly Build and Help Build Open Snturdny Evenings 70 (D. 5. T.) 1925, according teé announc the tax collsctor. The sale uled for Sept. 28. The employs from 400 to 800 people in | the manutacture of cotton y | warps. was 1 she used to Do you under- an idea and try and fix {accept money enough vindow-shopping | Ted More ; T think 2t is by a famous paint- hading his Mr on a f; all about and how he would ever get he was exa toak thought not to keep it there so he gave it and she kept it in and T went out to buy a new had to buy the bed on instalments. | attross re bring it trouble The chairs in our | parlor were old and rickety. mother the housck: aip half the bad couldn't bear Mr. Hall love each Alleged Murderer Is Taken Into abdomen y store in Wood street, died spital last thought two gun Bertino has a police record. finding of bushes in Kossuth street. during the will be offered for sale for fallure|Depressed over the loss of his year- to pay taxes of $5,612 assessed ARE REPRESENTED \Listed as Record Holders—First | Time Since War told me e prayed of a fu- ot to wre 1 the right | e | ife; don't 4 (P —For the the war Ger- among the k and official nce of the half-mile mark of made by Dr. Otto Peltzer, Berlin flier, at London last New York, Sept. {first time since before |many is represented |world's record Jholders in tr mother lfield sports as a result of th. But |1:51 |blond couldn't {July 3. ng. Moth- | Peltze which displaces | ten-year-old stand- | 1-5, is one of nine new {world’s records put on the books by |the action of the International Am {teur Athletic federation at its rece cefing in the Hague. ¥ American performances are {on the list, inc g Glenn Har- tranft's discus throw of 157 feot Hall,” {1 5-8 inches, made at San Franciseo described |in May, 1 Hart Hubbard's \k things |broad jump ot, 10 7-8 inches, . lmade at C1 June, 1925; and | was | Charles R. Trookins' yard hur- | |dle performanc seconds flat, |registered at Ames, Towa, in May, ard med ou pic- often ¢l Iying on looking ireamin, n ¢ records, iny o re 41.0 for rter mile by the Un hern California, made 7:42 for two-mile town in relays were A. Sot i tcture on |SOU L owned 1. o ]n,n\l scepted 1926 ¥ He the like hir it 1 [ Y New both National |0 thore, {2 new qu |scconds two-m avo Nurmi is on < of this year former 1 tly mpionships. | C. hung up | mile record of 41 3-5 | hile the Poston A. A. set a » stand:rd of 7:41 2-5. he Tist w 000 me oom, and | itar or 8 mother | on h that we | and displacing his ord. His country- ! V. Sipila is credited hoal 20-kilometer mark of 1: | last vear. while Charley ¥ a has his ety 11 on the books, SHETCHES GLEANED FROM ABOUT N.Y. Chinatown Iso't Same Old| Chinatown Any More | | Chinatown no longer is the ren- | us for op arnbling ad- e a Tong war and ways on guard | the Chinese Toltering streets is own Toft. | nole hey deliv- | and hid it in 1 va , for fear We knew always about | the quar- | ime over | Moth- ie in a to buy 111 ugh even | t 1 it was SuEhE troubl> betw white people ation an the nd nd convi torbidden. Th rip T went pt in Mr. Irs. Eve ing. She big com- ed her to her sleep- night of territory occu less than uare rile, but wi {ils limits are to be found everything |from local postoffice to Joss ho Even the corner square bulletin board with the n penings of the da o we did | any times run- narrow musty streets are fill- the odor of all kinds piled high in the store nidows and outside hang meats |drying in the sunlight. This is a | |means of preservati for these {people will keep their supply an |where from a week to six months, {providing the outer skin has not |heen broken Their jewelry {hoasted of, for on display |quisite hand-carved gold yracelets and other ornamen a stone highly prized by the C is on sale. with etahl of roof. are to he are shops ills tells o that her | r mother | fatal ill- »ads that | ke. She re of the 13 FEU ns name. On mbling and once patronized by | Conn is to he seen. This a scene of splendor, the furnishings being carried out in gold and teakwood. Boarded up are un- derground eways that led for blocks, ens den approaching danser. t to~ the Jo. |fifty cents, which is said to aid the {nigh priest in paying $25,000 a year [for the honor “f holding this posi Ition. He is permitted to leave the |building but once a year. | fve| The altar of this temple is of carv- ana |1 gold and required three genera- ovmer of |tions to complete. It is the same one on which Lillian Gish lay in one of the scenes in “Broken Blossoms.’ On the wall is hung a huge buule- {tin board containin: names of peo- | ple who have died. This hoard serves I ) ausolenm or tombstone by 0| inese do mot belleve in spe a boot- e sums of money for the ercction beeame | (T omorials, Instead, if & man i at Wood | Lo )iny, a certain amount of his lght and oo 7is taken toward the notation Glovanni |70 name on the board. s pocket | no. nmE house costs hot b i night San of a res- 0- t f I v and when ate highw ‘The milkman, usually seen only at o of theli, back ctment houses went|;nq private homes, mow includet steamships at New York piers in his delivery rounds. An enterprising | e he hid oo york dairy concern, observing | fe then |, ¢ fiorists, frult shops and candy |! was | g ons have made a success of their | Id by the | oring specially to steamer trade Ihas entered the same field and sets | |forth in glowing advertising terms how passengers departing from these bY | hores would revel in a case 1ast | o pcam or Grade A milk, Delivery to the “'hv passenger's stateroom is part of a clump {the scheme. Patrol to ushes, Giovanni ured ate 4 “No, T haven't been waiting long."” | ¢ statement heard most often on | head- |{no steps of the New York Public |; no in an|yinrary, at Forty-second street .'mdi gun. He!pifth avenue. Watches are constant- | ¢ gun hid- |1y flashing in and out of pockets: | argu- [someone is alw asking the time | {on these steps or they constitute one |of the princizal frysting places in ew York. COMMITS SUICIDE Shrewsbury, Mass., Sept mills in | $300,000, | 4 P three months ago, ement by | Lockwood L. Aldrich, 41, committed is sched- | suicide last night by shooting him- company self in the head with a revolver as he lay in his bed at home. His wite arns and | heard the revelver shot, but when | she reached him the man was dead in fold daughter | through the | to th AUTO DROPS INTQ im0 | Mass., narrowly escaped Woy i stre one opening into the w ticket agent at the Woolwich slip, |saw the car dash over the edge of women were s of | wer: { mained for the | through the opentng Proprietors of Monte Carlo and Business Men of Monaco at Odds— President of France Hot Radio Fan That Tune of Yar American at All, I 1 Doodle” is not Ame So says Dr. Gratt thority on musical hist “Yankee Doodle known as “All the Paris, Scpt. 4. (P)—A state of war exists between the business folk of Monaco and the directors of the Monte Carlo Casino. Troubla started iwo months ago when many shop- keepers, disconsolate over the foilure of the precent season closed their shops. Then thae Casino authorities forced the municipal council of Monte Carlo to pass an ordinance requiring | business houses, banks and restaurants to remain open twelve mopthsnext year closing not more than two Sundays and holidays in any one month. & Transient firms, such as dressmakers and jewelers, under this law would lose many mil- lions of francs since they plan on moving stock yes from one resort to anoiher. The luxe shop in Monte Carlo nev ed to be open more than six m W tune which originated One s lonc illoted the the subject of a weigh House of Commons wil ing its next fore starting fo Astor, kb session. Lady law cor are manic The women M. P'. use they have one nd re should be “What would Glug he could be told th of Parliaments were had ne room in wh noses, ks the Westr mittee hecau T RADIO FAN nply horrid.” nt Doumergue has hecome fan. Broadcasting progranu aincient corridors of the feudal Rambouillet in which Francis I died which now has becom of the Presidents of the Ire sue only took 1t to Rambouillet for the Pariiament tion. In the study where the Kir nerly read dispatehe h had t sident re- fro m Berlin and an cye NOW ARD Presid dent radio ar heca ca at t w fo; i h RICKET ¥ is hours o com 4 KING IS ( Kome, London, 1 T twinkli passion for mie,” ying, “I tune it mysc I simply hearing the entire world discourse. caplital to card Pittshu cation is ending the dist tions from ceives nev a Amer has is “Tt quoied he istralia, th Abbey to m special rom the London at the v delight i 0 sorry my 1 of nnot i = HIGHLAND SPATTEY the President’s vacation ends the mi Higlland is onth. idle pes ION 1 of thirty ve REPORT WARLIKE Just at the time w nations we ved less th miles from Parls International Democratic Peace, news comes out of Gern gress of the Steel Helmet of war veterans o authorities, to inc Germany ¥ report is mage of the work done in the ORGANIZAT n the yo h Boissey for pro- socicty composed ding nch pirit in the BALDWIN IS CALM D Stanley Ba 1y youth oci 1 > il six y “It is our ill that German yout hole German people shall be ing arms with t} territory stolen from u; this manual. of the “Of a o pre men ‘No, of the paper Kbt GIRLS SMOKING MU( Heay London's consume STORES CLOSED FOR VACATIONS ‘ereture annuelle” is a s wring nded that so meny eir store for ion, Stores of fairs just lower ! the whole mountain Awcrican tourists are F'renchmen in busine a month and go aw il classes which are family : their iron shutters for a mon 1d responsibl the another stor 10 W buildir un go or a become Dex that t part of t prime r grown fro nearly 85,000 “Look at who smoke now they smoke,” largest retail war women smoked ca 1 substantial perc women and girls, r ten to twenty cigarett e American ma s that “busi ake his va as usual n b he cc ation, bu continues in icves that the mtry or the I go together, He with him when he argzues, tons so who Frenchm 2y th and last yc is sur the store f his elien v should he remain, opens, and, P oY sald the wh open for the n Having learned the power of the tip while in France, a lady at Versaliics, the the French kings, asked whether if a guard ten dolla he could not make the famous fountains play? When the fountains of Versailles p thousands of J ns flock to see the sight, znd what the lady thought she could get for ten dollars costs the town of Versailles each time a considerable sum of money. e of — e gave L DIET and sou which M Josie Hay perary, attributed her at the age of 104. Mrs. Hayes dug potato them into the house. ndon, Sept. 4. (P—The tune of an at all—it's Irish 2 “God Save the Kink, anthem, Dr. Tlood says, also is an old Irish and has been going strong ever since, women members of Par cked Dby the six at Jeast. t members of the Mother .ancaster f th or rehouse at the London doc tobacco ge of our customers y of whom smoke from Two ¢ 'DOINGS IN FOREIGN CAPITALS LONDON=—= Now Comes Startling Information BERLIN=—= Changing Cars in Mid-air Success- fully Attempted on Cable Railway— 150 Bar Maids Are Without Jobs nkee Doodle Is Not t's Irish rankee (i all of whom survive. The eldest of them is 7 NEW FEMALE DRAMATIST Ireland has discovered a new woman dra atlst in Miss Elizaboth Hartc whose pla: fr. Murphy's Island,” has scored a succes: at the Abbey Theater in Dublin. Miss Hart, who was quite unknown, based the play on Irish events of 1821. Irish audiences show remarkable interest in the —presentation of scones that marked the fight of the Sinn Fein and some plays have provoked political dis turbances. But “Mr. Murphy's Isiand,” ha hurt nobody’s feclings and has been ceived all arou on Flood, an Irish au- ory. lHe asserts originally an Irish air o Galway. he British national somewhere about 1 mirror in rooms ent i ch the ith dur- well e ty complaint w I have to deal ¥ r America for a visit, five other women t with the housing quarters assigned them Improvements were de- BERLIN erimented nsion cavle ¥ the ghest poi; in Gern of the Zug Mountain on the Austr ntier. to guard inst th ger-carrying car may at som k enroute and keep the velle nid-air for many hours, auxiliary have been constructed which fit so closely st the ordinary car ngers to the cther. ap, the . gispatched to the point distressed passenger: on the eads to summit Bavarian fr In orde i t stu ng in new s i are particuldrlly angry little mirror. They con- possibility isione or Disraeli say if that a 5 il & becaus to powder they ich AN ent cricket fan o England and ting Lord Sefton and in h he be fi thro every between 15 Vis GOLD MEDAL Muckof Hamburg, former con on symphony orchesira, ha :n made an honor: of Bayreut} arded a gold medal. The occas < the fiftieth annivers ectival plays. Muck is regarded as one of the great 1 interpreters. In 1924 and 1 the Bayreuth plays. urther observed order mat calised £ Dr. Karl or of the Lo to e m fro almost wicket, s Dr. st Wagner he conducted dox re sponsored by Lady shower-pro dainty the anniver- the tombs o and Ilans au look ke d in the Ccotc out three in ¢ stma Wagner, vill be §9 in December, 150 BAR MAIDS JOBLE: Irime residence an barmaid : made jobler r Village squicentennial E ¥ in Germany, 10 nd faced a bai- tiee at Javariar althoug ir posing “kulture." s, say thoug s a cultural 1y doubtful on Th to be forseen that 1h 21 not flourish by merely di era clicked ntlemen, looked do you he what German iement?” the erestediy mat Wi~ Fremdenbl he replicd. value of the village of beer H numbers of nnder e of ns y of cigarettes in large measure for ing forced huge tobaceo The pr whom two e L PRIEST CLIMBS ) rities iny tr r Oherm Nt th r of in viilagm t Ottering, a has achieved first German pries without a guid Alpine Guides ha 1al in recognitio ser has A \iount Blanc a elimb The Iederntion of idea t the m the tobaceo on is one of imports in e gui nd for 1 pulati R ¢ his on the ha 1910 obaceo AS SPORT \ on th hich hoxing enjoys in German 0 tons to ro e number of girls and women wnd look s D 1d of one the firm fore the mparatively littie. Now the amount of 0 men i biood the peri artists ar opular that ole for it. Just reflect e to buy a’hook, what s a day. milk wi ves, of Holyeross, longevi She s hefore her death v dinner and carried She had nine children, r it is pos peor weighted down with war debts and distressed by dearth of homes, fo patronize ‘amuscme of this sort it isn't worth leading into brighter future.” LL BANDITS ARE GIVEN PRISON TERHS Caponi and Spezzaro Found Guilty | 1 I ; RIVER IN MAINE Woman Swims to Salety Alter| Being Imprisoned of Westboro Robbery May 19. Worcester, Sept. 4 (P—The jury the case of Willlam Caponi and | | Angelo Spezzaro, alleged Westboro Ealli, Sept. 3 (P—Miss Bertha M. |payroll bandits, reported a verdict e and | Of Builty at 3 o'clock yesterday fte: 1 Miss Harriet West of Northampton, | Jitcrnoon after deliberating four | 2 deatty v [iours. They were sentenced to Irowning Monday evening when the | “oLve 1* to 15 years in state prison : : : 3 The men were arrested in connec- light coupe in which they were driy-| 0% ! ! : |tion with the robbery and assault ing onto the state ferry slip at| - k } | ot Paymaster Henry P. Woodward, 'wich, broke through the chain| . ’ S { the Westboro Weaving company, ched across the end of the slip | ”, from whom $1400 of the company's nd plunged into the waters of the | . oo i el B Kennebec. Imprisoned in the car, | P2YTOll was stolen, May 19. Four 5 *!men were known to have been im- plicated, although only three were caught. In addition to Caponi, who was 23 years old, and Spezzaro, who was 25 years old, police arrested Carmen Guiffe, 21 years old, but he was released at the preliminary hearing in Westboro. Efforts to locate Joseph Delgrosso sought for questioning in connec- tion with the robbery, have been unavailing. vhich was submerged in the water, of the young women smashed he glass in the windshield with her! oot, and both crawled through the ter. Swim to Safety The young women would have seen «drowned but for the fact that | hey arve both efficlent swimmers, | arle C. Sawyer, former | v patrolman, and now | he slip he rushed to the edge. By | ACCEPT RESIGNATION he time he reached there the young | Hartford, Sept. 4 (P—The reslg- Imming about in the | Nation of Major Edward A. Judge, ater. He lowered the slip until [ commanding officer of the second hey were able to reach the edge of | company, Governor's Foot Guard, t. Trom this perilous position they | Which was submitted by him earlicr {in the week, has been accepted and he has been placed on the retired list by order of Adjutant General George M. Cole. The two were later taken to the home of one of the crew of the Governor King, where they re night, being given| The commanding officer of the Iry clothing and made as comfort- | Second company, Governor's Foot Jle as possible. Both were cut|Guard was directed to call a meet- bout the arms in breaking away |ing of his command to' nominate a 1e glass in the windshield of the | successor to fill the vacancy caused car and in drawing themselves| DY the retirement of Major Judge. The | The results of the nominations are the | to be submitted to the office of the djutant general. made, cuts are not deep ones, and young women apparently sustained no serious effects from their trying| ey experience. | ELEPHANT CAPTURED | Fernte, B. C., Sept. 4 (P—Myrtle, |an escaped crcus elephant which dis- Basle, Switzerland, Sept. 4 (P— appearcd August 6, was captured The “Hindenburg Crop” is the latest yesterday in the mountain wilds feminine hair dressing fashion on|where she had taken refuge. the continent. A hair dresser in| Search is being continued for one Basle started the style and it has ap- |other elephant of the herd still at pealed to a great many women, large in the vieinity of Cranbrooke. speciall during hot weathe, The financial Joss en account of the cause the mode is more masculine stampdede of these and three other ‘han any which has yet appeared. 'elephants is estimated at $30,000, NEW HAIR STYLE For Quick Keturns Use Herald Classified Ads. R N WMEN BETTER AUTOMORILES ARE BUILT - BUICK WiLL BUTLD THEM a completel cushionedy enginc in-Head Engine now has The Buick Valve “rubber heels”. Resilient rubber cushions at every engine mounting, absorb noise and save the engine from shocks and strains, Money can buy no finer performance than the 1927 Buick offers you, no matter how much you are willing to spend. The GREATEST BUICK EVER BUILT Capitol Buick 193 Arch Street |

Other pages from this issue: