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= —_— SPECIAL SALE —of — SERVING TRAYS The Dickinson Drug Company 169-171 MAIN STREET e e el ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. John F. Keaveny HAS EQUIPPED A DENTAL OFFICE AT 321 Main St. Where He Will Conduct a General Practice of DENTISTRY Chowder, Clams, Steaming s Clams, Soft Shell Crabs, Lobsters, Crab Meat, Shrimps OYSTER HOUSE THE HONISS 22 STATE ST. HARTFORL Under rGant’s Department Store $500,000 Fo! First Mortgages At Low Rates of Interest on dwellings, apartment houses and centra) business Dproperty—complated bufldinga or construction loans In Hart- ford and vicinity. This company can re-finance your present mortgages on favorable terme and appraisements. Information without obifgation. First Bond & Mortgage Co. of Hartford 803 Main St. 35032 F. L. McGuire OPTICIAN A. T.McGuire OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted | BOOTH’S BLOCK || —————————ee————— WEDDING RING SHOP DIAMONDS 140 Main Street, Room 1 Upstairs Fine Watch Repairing —_— which is in a residence zone. The Vogel was authorized to proceed wi paint shop at Glen strect, provided it is built 10 feet from of fireproof material Other cases were: Nicholas Cher- pak, for permission to build a store on Lasalle street, held up for in- | spection; M. J. Warren, for rgten- [ tion of the present building line on Albany avenue, granted; Y. Jaffe, for store alterations on Rhodes reet, held up for inspection; Harry llins, for a gasoline station on fillow street, granted; Rebecca Kennedy for a garage and store- room on Maple street, denied. |BRUNEITES FAVORED 10 WIN IN BEAUTY CONTEST | 73 of Those at Atlantic City Are estate MRS. HALL STIFF AND FORMAL EVEN AS A TEACHER IN SUNDAY SCHOOL Charlotte Mills Couldn’t Sl b s A 5 once she knew “Warm Up” to Wife of |sne was rignt, ene woula stick up Sk . | for herself and you couldn't scare Pastor, .She. Writes .in ner into keeping still, no matter | what. Life Story. In those days father s plain about her going church so much. He'd as why she couldn’t let the other ladles do °% | more of the work and not be run- ning up there the whole time, Mother would always answer: o church all T got. It's hole e nd I won't give it for ything or anybody. I 11 go as often as I can.” But nev neglected her home do {it. Only on Sundays egan to sing in the wouldn't g home 11 because they had to go vestry to take off their and the cholr singers naturally later getting away e congregation Mother would always prepare the ngs for dinner before she went in the morning, but she had to finish them up when she came back and it made dinner pretty late — around three o'clock some- tim At would home once bl out And alwa 18ed to com- to the|w (Copyright, 1926, Famous Featu Syndicate, Inc.) (Editor's Note: In “My Story Charlotte Mills, after four years of silent suffering, bares her he She sketches the ominous back- |y, ground of the famous Hall-Mills | g, murder mystery, and follows the twisted threads of fate which led | up to it. She had told how he bitious mother, apparently doom to poverty by her unfortunate mar- riage, turns to the church for con | solation, and there meets the ¥ | Hall and comes to love day she reveals her c tions to the stern p Mrs. Hall, widow of the rector, w is now under bail in connection with the double murder of Mrs Eleanor Mills and the Rev, Edward Hall), to Dark Skinned Belles—Voting ate Comes Tomorrow quite Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 8 (P— Gentlemen prefer brunettes, figures | show at the sixth annual inter-city beauty pageant Not o did the gentlemen judges of 73 clties pick more bru- hettes than blondes to compete for | the 1926 title of Miss America, but betting odds favor three brunettes, | Miss Denver, Miss New Orleans, |ana Miss California, to one blonde, . | Miss Gr W York, as having I mothar ol ha ) |the best chances. Aleo, rumor has Love and Tears wonder, perhaps, feeling was toward Mrs. just | Dad didn’t like that and said eo. it h should People | what my couldn’t wait that long, he lit that Miss Denver's name has al- put the gas on under the pots and | ¢ been placed in the golden pans himself and get dinner start-|,;oic from which the name of Fay ed. He did, -too. For a long time|panphier's successor will be drawn father got Sunday dinner — for|tomorrow night. himself that is —and would it i 5 o | There has been no official in- ot 50 Out before mother Was qyuiry into campaign expenses, but home e it has been revealed that Miss Cali- Tather liked the Halls In a sort|ornig hrought no less than a dozen of way, especially Mr. Hall. Yet he | 1aihine suits to help her entice the always fussed at mother and I for | genflemen judges into having so much to do with them. by | the decision. They're high monkey-monks,” | Misg Baltimore, who is Miss Mil- would say, “and you're not in 5 | drea Adam, today bears slight scars their class and never will be. They |on her back and hands, testimony don't want you around. I should to an accident she tried to conceal. think you could see she is trying Hall | Mrs. Hall is the kind of lady it |1s hard to have any feeling toward I conld never think of Mrs. Hall as a person with red blood and warm {Impulses or ~emotions or anything {like that. She must have feelings, lof course, everyone has, and once |1 saw her ery. But even then I | can’t remember having a pang over it, as my chum aid. | Tt happened when my chum and 1 were in Mrs. Hall's Sunday school She always taught in the and even after this ppened, she went r could get in- in anything she said. ¢ seemed to be no heart in it. couldn't put things so you | She was slightly burned on the to freeze you out. Have a little| night of her arrival when the fuse sense, and 1ot an electric hair dryer blew out. And mot Her light kimono caught fire, and “That's b 7 | her sister, who is her chaperone and could care about them. We used t0 stand them.” shares her hotel room with her, think of everything on earth but ghe always in those days stood |saved her from serlous injury by | what she was reading or saying to up for Mrs. Hall and said that aft- | tearing off the kimono and throw- | ue. She simply didn’t have a “Way™ | er you knew her as she (mother) |ing it into a basin. | with children or young peo thought she knew her, you came to | went to a banqy which was no fault of hers, just a'jike her, 3 night without s: misfortune. But once a very strange | the incident, but the glass happened . o o o out. re vs use you don't under- say: t and ball that ng anything abou; thing story leaked There was a big stained window right . opposite wl | sat in Sunday school, with size figure of Moses on it, in colored robes and sands while Mrs. Hall would be about St. Paul and St. Peter, would be trying to draw pletures of Moses. Sometimes I got him pretty well, every feature and fold of his clothes, and es I would try and improve on it; I remember always had a l/rd time with his | feet and hands. 3ut that is what I was thinking f, not the Sunday school lesson, |and all the others in the class were {the same way. It was simply tor- {ture 1o sit there, Well, one time Mrs, Hall wanted ant. It was religiou to 1 be USE RADIO ILLEGALLY Los Angeles, Sept. 9 (P — West |e ast rum runners are using the ra- dio to aid In running the govern {ment blockade off southern Califor- |nia, federal prohibition agents de- | clared following the seizure of broadcasting station in a low her where a still was found. T. I il after | Dernberger, a radio operator, and a drinking a cup of coffee at the| companion were arrested charged luxurious home of Mrs. Hall. In|with operating a liguor plant. tomorrow's absorbing chapter, Miss | Mills also reviews the and we a life dressed Charlotte ama. of strangely (Tomorrow seribes the life mother became Mills 4 GOBI EXPLORATIONS END prog countries My were ch I was " Bone meal is an excellent phos- phorus fertilizer for lawns. lisaw ng. werd at nd | {at ew u as this: vears. Could/ she have prevented | has abandoned efforts to further ex- B. Shackelford, camera man accom- s continuing his explorations next | When the time for rehearsal came, Is how we felt about it. day she | chum was sorry and tried to say| Chang the zoning act to place hard as nails and made no apology | 2 ¢ fOr €ach tenement were discuss- T only tell this to illustrate how ftor it was found that a strict | feer £ mattors whit Ciks > | though 15 room apartments, ag- and kind in her way. But she never 0 the application of Alfred F.| . and I facl sorry for an : ° : "W |perty_on Court strect. Since he is cons of a question which has| San Franeisco, Sept. 9 (—The haunted her whole life for four|p A dreeat exnen| ton the murder of her dear mother?) | piore the Gobi desert following re- oo fusal of Chinese bandits to permit 4 the party to enter Mongolia, Jam ese im was to ; . to represent panying Andrews, said on his ar- h ich T didn't par | rival here. Andrews is returning, y care for because my costume | shackelford said, in the hope of to be made out of burl )!“ winter. !not a soul showed up. Mrs. Hall |, ., came to an empty room. Ad] Bo: d Lik Plan of | R s e o e ma ALJUSUMED Board Likes Plan o | When we \ s Tl ourt Street Building 1id how disappointed and humili- | |ated she felt, and she cried. My somet Some of the others _u;]h“ two an l“ Hzr-u-rm}urns apartments | the willing to come 2 Lt restrictions of | SOtk of tibexcsn Pt T ok v which require a specified lot St T ought to, hut 1|00 1St night by the board of ad- | couldn’t open my mouth, | s The pageant never was given, Fhe pronoeell chaugs was snggest- | Mrs. Hall affected me and a gopq | IB{ETPretation of the law would not [ many others too. Wo just cowtant POPMIE the erection of a building | for her, or towards ner me | With 30 three-room apartments, al- circumstances | |18 were, T am sure she meant fo. be | STCELNE ‘nvn:o.-a::)\;v mumber of rooms | nice an tha she wa v od | £ 5 60 & T dank ahe e s yory: £000 | e WY ArAl han i es i canalaeran | ot under your skin; va ef Eot under your skin; always left| | ouitt for & pormit to build 28| S three-room apartments and three | She couldn't he any e | SnitShe tanylterant AT o oor apartmenta on' his vrotl body who has that manner. The |0 et RnarE oRt R | only friends they have a i e e fe h e 1 v friends they have are people|;i.; roquirements for the district he sq Miss Baltimore | house | 'FLASHES OF LIFE: LADY ASTOR TO ‘ TALK OVER WJ property line and | | | | The Associated Press) York—A soclety girl is to a doctor who is suffering in hospital from blood poisoning con- tracted from a charity patient. Miss Adele Bowne Carpenter, sister-in- law of Consuelo Vanderbilt Smith's |mother, is engaged to Dr. Robert E |Brennan, who was brought up in Louisville. (By w m | | Highland Falls, N |Huntington Tracy, niece of the late Mrs. Poerpont Morgan, is to marry Prince Simon Constantine Sidamon- | Eristoff, who fought for Russia and is now a mechanical engineer at |Bayonne, N. J. | {man, Atlantic City, N. J.—The beautles seem to have brought prosperity to |the shore with them. A total of $5,147,949 was deposited in the city's banks in one day, breaki records. | | London—Andrew W. Mellon, who is quoted by a journalist as saying |he has not seen the slightest sign of lany lack of prosperity in Europe, presumably is contributing some |more to that prosperity by having his portrait painted here. Paris—And now the potato bug is threatening Franco-American rela- tions. The growers say that the pest, which is bevond control, somes from across the Atlantic, but | they don't seem to be aware of the American remedy, Paris green. , N. Y—Black bass are eluding distinguished Vermont- |ers. The president and Attorney |General Sargent rode 40 miles and {fished till long after dark without | any luck. Paul Smith giving her | | Brook, Ind—Hoosiers stick to- gether. George Ade has written the New York Herald-Tribune concern- ing the use of material from one of | George's stories In a novel by Theodore Dreiser: “Most of our guild are at work on tiny struc- tures which stay close to the ground. Dr. Dreiser is putting up skyscrap- ers. If, in building up one of his massive structures he used a brick | from my plle, goodness knows he | was welcome.” i Worth while to tune M. standard time to- | Tts Mike will be in stor at a banquet. New Yo in at 8 P. night on WJ front of Lady | Washington—The boys who were | drafted to serve under Pershing have | chanca to get even. He won't lead [the American Legion unless ho drafted, meaning unless there great demand for him. Philadelphia—Billy Mitchell has refused to become a candidate for president of the National Aeronautic Association. The association’s con- vention has been informed by a dele- gate that the navy would not per- mit him to have the job, anyhow. | Britain-— C. Cheney of ter with net score of 65 state senior golf champion- Manche captures ship. Norwich—Two day session of criminal superior court closes with ither a jury or court trial at great ving to the state. | wins three 00 2.10 ! Hartford—Philo Ne straight heats in the | pace at Charter Oak. i feature Norwich—First in the Consumers Buying Into The Light And Power Industry According to the National Electric Light Association, customers of electric light and power companies in the past 11 years have been buying securities based on the electrical industry in some such fashion Number of additional companies by years Y.—Miss Anne | thing from The had the y Rirls ev new 1 we drew comparisons, T suppose, t whatever The oth slices of In wax pa Easter and tle presents laas All Colored Shoes Cleaned k like new by the Reglazing Method . Y. Shoe Repairing Shop 115 West Maln Street Telephone 2313 John Marra The ORIGINAL Malted Milk A well-balenced, palatable, easily as- similated food that pourishes and up- builds. Use at meals, between meals, or upon retiring, and whentired or bungry. Prepared at homeby stirring the pow- der in hot or cold water. No cooking. Ao LD CLASSIFIE FOR YOUR WANTS ’ | to iwiched nday tructor. 1 their them 1001 before, h hat nature per, and at handker on cake aving wrapped | Christmas, New Year gave us lit- lefs with or corne | who belong to them or want some- teacher we been a totally different type, it made us n less inclined to love our gret to say that not realizing, a person has to be makes them. r teacher used to bring us chocol or, us on hikes an tell of | in between tra resting things el ol Bible used to wonder w w when and I were 1 ollow the s got o as m us pam Neighbor Dumb Anim We me 1 phlets and nals a ten th- on “Be and 1 to church pe she was ormal Wzlr patr w The only had was like make a Hall. Mot but seldom show- people =0 di he 1 er a n her h sort didn't being to have thusiasm even if they kinds of was that sort and id was driven too she on she tles for us little, ly som wh showed, was sure she was mes n Dan of asked a special exception. A = cs of questions by Chairman Willlam H Attwood who recently| retur from Burope brought out that the building department and Clerk Thomas Linder of the zoning hoard approve the type of construc- on, and their examination of the plans, they said, convinces them the | building will be absolutely fireproof | and will afford ample sideyards and | ourt. Mr. Lewitt told the board | t the building will have outside | rooms throughout. Stockholders obtained 4,044 4,351 3,681 8242 5,186 19,872 53,063 118,544 156,725 279,186 294,467 375,000 1,322,361 Shares of stock sold 93,310 57,130 38,183 82,007 42,388 194,021 454,139 830,222 1,450,707 1,806,300 2,478,165 2,250,000 9,775,512 Year 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 i 1921 i 1922 Judge James E. Cooper spoke in | 1923 favor. He felt, he said, that Court| et is the ideal place for a bulld- | 1924 of the type Mr. Lewitt plans to | 1925 (Est.) erect and that the city needs such | Total apartment house service as the pe plans to offer. tatements of other members of the board indicated a disposition to ict favorably, but Chairman Att- vood suggested that a week be tnkon to study the plan submitted by Lewitt’s archit 8 Clerk Thomas Linder advised the that the city of Spring- s a lot requircment sim- ew Britain, has made a ting special excep- similar cases and Spring- works out well, the developments in the American investment field years. comnlites Investors interested in further details on this havi booklet in which we have attempted to give a co of the entire public utilities investment field. n finds it plan has been approved the building commission. In the absence of a quorum of the | board, the application of Elizabeth ! Rocha for a change from residence to business zone of property on East | Main street east the railroad tracks, was laid over to the next mee The TFidelity Finance Co., with- irew its application to allow busi- ness uses on the old Beach property on West Main street, now in a resi- lence zone. ward O. Kilbourne asked that | his gasoline fllling station case go over to the next meeting. He Is asking permission to continue work on a station partly constructed, by 6 Central Row, Hartford, Conn. Telephone 2-1141 ’ adopting customer ownership plan The growth of “customer ownership” of public utilities securities, particularly in the field of light and power, is one of the significant aspects of America’s public utilities are invited to send for our new PUTNAM & CO. Members New York and Hartford Stock Exchanges 31 West Main Street, New Britain, Conn. Telephone 2040 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1926. Z STATION TONIGHT | race, 2.24 trot at New London coun- | ty fair goes to Spirit volo. Hartford—Attempted holdup fails when George Romeo, gasoline sta- tion attendant, attacks bandit with searchlight but gets butt end of re- volver over head. Norwich—Joe Jackson, Norwich, state amateur champlon in 100 yard dash, is twice defeated by Gordon W. Winslow of Putnam. Omaha—Indignant when a 42 year old woman tried to vamp him, Wil- |liam Everitt, 103, Omaha's oldest marched her to the nearest {policeman. She was arrested and |fined $10 today for disorderly con- duct. | = | Pittsburgh—A tooth for a tooth |was apparently the motto of a |stranger who bought six barrels of {moonshine whiskey in Somerset |county and paid for it with counter- [ teit $50 bills. Pittsburgh—James Campbell, 52, went to sleep in a newly laid cement {dewalk and police were forced to ut off part of his hair and clothing before he could b conveyed to a tation house. He was charged with intoxication. Fairhaven, Mass.—Miss Priscilla Alden, now just 16, and a direct des- cendant of her famous namesake, Is carving out a modern niche for her- self. She has won the singles cham- pionship of greater New Bedford against several veteran opponents. Biarrite, France—The “durnest lery” of fashion calls for the wearing or rubber ear rings painted in bright colors. London—A lesson in the effects of {environment: -ten cows, long main- !thined in the heart of London's shop- ping center for the usual dairy pro- duction are palpably ill at case when sent to rural pastures for a tion.” New York—A shop catering large- ly to puzzle addicts has opened here | and reports a large retail business in purchases and “swaps.” The bulk of the trade is among men and wo- men of mature years who eagerly | look for the latest intricately twisted | “brain teaser,” and devices requiring manual dexterity in putting a rolling | pill in a much-obstructed hole. — | Chicago—After forty years the! conscience of a former employe of the Rock Island Lines has made res- titution - of $1,000. The penitent wrote that in the $0's he took nearly amount “under the delusion | that T was geiting even for what I} considered small wages. I was get- 5 per month. I was wrong. | forgive me.” | cerning interfergnce with passersby | TOWN CHANG! Citizens of Detroit, Minn., Vote to | Call it Detroit Lake | Detroit Lakes, Minn., Sept. 9 CP) | —Detroit, Minn., has passed out of | | existenzc as a result of the decision of voters to rechristen the town. Conflict with Detroit, Mich., was | the grievance which led to the vote of four to one Tucsday in favor of changing the name to Detroit Lakes. | | Filing the result of the vote with the jcoynty auditor put the new name | | Into effect. (No data) 208 during the past few and other financial mprehensive picture | more desifablé than Commeretal street. Chief W. C. H. of the police de- The farmers’ market on Commer- | partment said today he had heard of cial street m located in the |the proposed change and he believes open space between Elm and Main |it might be well to make a trial of streets, between the Central Junior |it. Councilman Samuel Sablotsky high school and No. 2 fire station, and John G. Buckley are among tha it was learned today. Some members |councii members who favor the pro- of the common council, who have |pased change, and it is expected it interested themselves in the market |will come up at a meeting of tha since complaints have come in con- |ordinance committes soon. Prefer South End Site For Produce Exchange | | and blocking the vehicular t ic, READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADY believe the proposed location much | FOR YOUR WANTS Keep in Trim! Good Elimination Is Essential to Good Health. TO be well, keep youreliminative system active! The kidneys are the blood filters. If they fail to function as they should, there is apt to be a retention of body poisons. Symptoms are a dull, languid feeling and, often, toxic backaches, headaches, and dizziness. That the kidneys are not functioning properly s some- times shown by burning or scanty excretion. More and more people are learning to assist their kidneys by drinking plenty of pure water and the occasional use of a stimulant diuretic. Doan’s Pills have been publicly recommended by more than 50,000 endorsers. Ask your neighbor! Doan’s Pills Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys 60c all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co.. Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo; N. Y. SPEAKING AS AUTOMOBILISTS— 43 THERE'S GREAT MILEAGE IN A ¥% STETSON EV SN if you do not wear Stetson hats your- self, you do know many men who have worn them for years. There are just two reasons—Stetson Style and Stetson Service — the snappy, youthful style and inimitable Stetson quality. Treat yourself to one of the new models this Fall—check up on the mileage—you will get long service and you will find its economi- cal in the end. Connecticut Hat Co. 6 R. R. ARCADE THE HART STUDIO Room 217—Booth’s Block CLASS IN HARMONY FOR ADVANCED MUSICAL STUDENTS, INSTRUMENTAL OR VOCAL Course includes Theory of Music, Melody Writing, Harmony, Musical Form and Analysis of Instru- mental and vocal Music. Appointments may be made at the Studio on or after Saturday, Sept. 11. Phone 2531 THERON WOLCOTT HART PIANO INSTRUCTION VOCAL COACHING ETHEL ALEXANDER Of the Sergi Marinoff School of Russian Ballet of Chicago TO OPEN SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL DANCING OCTOBER 2, 1926 Classes will be conducted Saturday mornings in.the ballroom of the Hotel Burritt for pupils between the ages of 5 and 16 years. APPLY AT THE DESK OF THE HOTEL BURRITT FOR SCHEDULE OF CLASSES Registration Saturday morning, September 25, in the ballroom between 10 and 12 o’clock. Y