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;\rohlb](lon parchment, peacock feathers, or fine EHN AIM R | linen. were Teld by two - dcacons ON ELECTION ARE HEARD FROM BOTH (Continued From First Page) Spokesmen for the now dominant | party declared such contentlons were but optimistic bubbles which will buret with the counting of the| votes after sundown. Ta obtain control of the senate the democratic party will have to pick up nine seats now held by re- publicans, while they must sway 36 congress districts to get a major of the house. Many of the republican togas at stake were won in the Harding andslide in 1920 and the house that is asking another tenure of office came into power in the tidal wave of 1024, Turnovers Expected Pointing to this situation, cratic managers maintain th the presidency not now can eount on a number of tu involving seats in both house. also call attestfon that tha democratic senators to be from the solid sou is certain. The four borde and, Missouri demo- with seven e republican concede this, the that these slates, found in the within the Other states in s believe the oven chance York, Ohio. In T4 UUtah a least fighti Repub) Azain counte tio o1l theah frequently ¢ colt P. fold Illinois, and Color vise are confident that few roads will be made in t > house. «ers insist they will car republican districts in Pennsy will recapture a number of house it went to republican column in the Coolidge victory fwo vears ago, and also win :m'u « tricts which they conten: satisfied with administration Prohibition Question Too In many of the contests for senate and house seats, prohibition has run through the whole fabric of the ¢ paigns and in eight states the voters are, expressing their views on this question in referenda. These states are New Yor Wisconsin Tllinois, Montar ssouri, Colora- do and California 'he proposals put forward, range all the way from repeal of all sta prohibition enforcement codes to ex- pressions of sentimont for guidance of representatives in the halls of congr Both wets and drys have beer tive in practically all of the tests as well as in the fights for of- fices in a number of s in wh the e is not brought to vote. TIn Maryland, which h. fused to adopt olicics against the which repudiated i Senator Weller, cama out for Tydings, prohib re l,umu entative Ser ll:’l(ol ial Out of the o rved to forus number of t natorial Presid Caolidge came to the aid of his 1 sonal fricnd, William Butler, in the contest against fo Senator David 1 Walsh The president made an oy journey from Washinzton to N ampton to person: st his for the man who i} ed ¥ « paign for ago. @ other s hator th- 1ot two ¥ Corruption Charges, harges of political ought into Pennsylvania, Oregon, Washingt The inquiry by a mittee into it named st 1 carn most to th time ol th the polls 3eeanse presider paigns in Ohio 1 ry shar Governor Watile for ¢ tial zaln is putt 1014 the oo York's ! Wadswor thrae-cornered in the republican challenged becanse the tial v nomi und ra KEEPING WELL ~—An NR Tablet (a vegetable aperient) taken at night will help kecp you well, by toning and strengticning your di- elimination, m- | Atlee Pomerene seeks to regain in omn the senate seat he lost four vears ago and ‘should he succeed |many. pulltlcnl dopesters believe he would figure on the dem- n»r-uc prelldcntlal lst. In Mary- | | land, Governor Ritchie, who draw a | scattering vote at Madison Square | Garden fn 1924, is attempting to win another gubernatorial term. Foverish activities by many can- | didates and some scattered charges | of irregularities or threatencd ir regularities in the voting attended the wind-up of the campaigns last 1ight. Smith Closes Campalgn Accompanied by Robert Wagner, | the demo ratic senatorial candidate, Governor Smith 3 ade a series of speeches on hi; native heath, New | York's 1 st His republican opponent, Representative Ogden | Mills, made his last appeals on Long Island, while Senator Wadsworth spoke in communities near his own lome town. Senator Root and his democ opponent, ow, also carried their campaign heyond sundown. | while in Idaho, Oklahoma and other | states, the same program was fol- lowed. An open charge of vote-buying by nator Butler's organization in the enator'’s native town of New Bed- rd was made by Senator Walsh who clair that votes were being ought at $10 each. its power to es from abominable pra them for th WEN ANXIOUS T0 SERVE ON JUR Continued from First Page) state on events ooting of csg ealled substantiate Norris cannot (he to the frst wi cir allegation that r trial in of him. Tn sfer, Nor attompted “other tor to atholics and of the Baptist pas prosecute him. The defense witnesses to testify whether they believe it would be to select a jury from Tar- county residents to try Norr! Dr. Webb Walker, a w! known ph said he 1 heard so fixed opi tie guilt or ce fendant at conclusion a be found in has summoned more today as to jons of come 1 12 the cauld not county. Joe R testifed this wctor, 1o a and to board i tten to himself of his chur Tiks lo Hnld Rites For Ha 2 (M Houdini s body Houdini, magician, w nday in Detroit, was brought train today for burial Th ervices by the Elks will Jewish rites at th 1. Representatives r reatrical Guild and wmdeville Artists 4 leipate and th of Magicians of @ president toda ans wers under morial service. I"raternal stion mr pa ican Society i Hot ounced p a publie m ini w for A Clean {and her husband, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, (ASTRID BAKES CAKE 'FAN INDUSTRY IS FOR HUSBANI] TOBE| BOOMING IN BHINA ‘Hankow Becoming Center o (Continued from First Page) | Astrid of Sweden, the bride-to-be of Crown Pringe Leopold, “Happy the bride whose nuptial bouquet is wet from the rain,” is an old Swedish saying, and that of the daughter of the Vikings likely will be greeted by raindrops when she united by civil ceremony in Stockholm next Thu y, return to Brussels later for t religious ceremonies. Records sh that during the past ten years there has been rain in Brussels on 20 out of the 50 each Novemb Another Swedish proverb recom- mends that the bride insert into her ling gown some branches of an aromatic plant, to protect ler against the evil mountain splrits. Belgium is a flat country. Its high- st mountain could be called a hil in I's native Swedon. ish bride wants to be 1 to ensure her happiness she lvised to wear shoes without cles or strings. Milking a cow ust before the marriage ceremony i assurance that the bride will nevers | be thirsty. Says \[u:solml s Death Wouldn’t Kill Fascism Nov. 2 (P “Mussolini's 14 not Tascism but aris, tice today in the Petit Parisian. minister is on a visit to Paris. “With the death. of Mussolini,” Signor Roceo addes he movement would become more violent. Musso- lini, thanks to the great authority he enjo ded in giving al form. abruptly his s would t clements, set pr f he disappeared cessors undoubtedly ridden extremist perhaps even we should see in Italy 1 sentences imposed on hecome as rigorous as with you in those bygone day suspects OLD NEWSPAPERMAN DIES Washi Wallace Dunn, 6 the veteran news ents of Washington, died here today of complications following an opera- tion. TI'rom 1843 to 1906 he member of the ¥ sociated Press. 1. ent of the St. oneer Pres gonian. He county, Mi ater ho Paul was T'i- was born in Mecker neso . READ HERALD (¢ FOR YOUR WANTS BREAKS A COLD IN A HURRY ‘‘Pape's Cc;id éc‘fi.\pound” is pleasant and affords Instant Relief \Q Don't and snuft throat, stiffness. Quit blow your throb. in and 1up! ng! Ea thing ¢ ueh prompt Compound rets wi 5 no 1 g incon o t the gen- Don't acee thing else, uine. pt Victory By an overwhelming vote The nesple of our city Have again elected —DESC Dry aning a its best, On the winning platform of suces In refreshing coler in renewing luster in reviving fabric AND DESCO (( THAN ORDINARY CALL ISTS NO MORE DRY CLEANIN 904 Everybody Does | facturing | up | a committee of public safety ! hington staft of | and the Tortland Ore- | This Business Hong Kong, China, Nov. 2 it reports from China Hankow {s becoming one of the Orient's largest fan producing cen- ters, indi tsin, long well-known fan citles rave a strong competitor. ws, Bgypta ted population of India hav ns back as history The winnowing fan for blowing chaft from grain is often mentioned in the riptures various bas-reliefs, centuries reveal the use of the fan as an or- namental as well as an industrial instrument On one bas-relief, cherib is shown attended by women carrying feather fans. Pocts Blame Cupid for Its Origin While historians, in their g t or cold fa upon which to base their narratives, have traced the fan's use back to the reign of the inese Emperor Hsien Yuan, B. €. the poets would blame Cupid They refer to the ‘—that the first fan was ich Cupid tore from the as ep on her bed of roses jually intcresting is the old Chi- lezend—that the fan had ite the I'cast of Lanterns where, when tha heat was oppres- sive, the beautiful davg! m-nhvm let fall her m > picked it up she a neighbor and th as far 2 grace of y all dropped their ollowed h mple Used to Keep Flies From Sacred Vessels Middl mot masks and fon In the the fan be- cred in- fficer of high rank ion was one of the highest of the monarch and one only roval prinees and familics of the first could qualify. The er of investiture took place be- the monarch with stately pomp The fan had ite plac in the liturgy of the carly Christian 1reh. fire-fan (bellows), 1ered sirument, was "v iests to 1"I§V|ll‘“ the » flabella (religious the in the gi for which scions of the nobility meny The fans) 1ED ADS { odo‘oy@ » . PCES Me 7 ,qumw)Tu'e lv\"*&r OUR COFFELS ARD AL- WAYS PRESH ROASTED. CERHOUSE GIN SHORT LOIN LAME r 'stil LAMB m't . BEST FRANKFORTS 10 1bs Ed SUGAR 3 1. g 024 EVAPORATED MILK PANCAKE FLOUR- CAMPBELL’S Lily of the Valley Corn Liiv of the Pes Large Me l’lum\ 2 Ihs Not-A-Seed Raisins 2 packages Peaches .. can S canilie Valley can 19¢ 19¢ 25 Fancy Jc WERGWOOD CREAMERY LOTY BLE( Good Lack OLEO ) 3Ze FANCY Nucoa | standing beside the | century, (P— | liglous festivals; that | e that Canton and Tien- | manu- | probably | century. and | old, | |its ol {lamp, with of | il brands .. P()Rk And BEANS 3 cans 23¢ altar, keeping lho flies from the sacred vessels. Gradually the use of the flabella | took on a deeper meaning; they were held to signify the waiting of divine Influence upon the cere- monles, the movement to and fro symbolizing the quivering of the wings of the angels. This mean- ing ccased with the close of the 16th yet today large peacock ather fans are carried at re- and upon ordina- TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1926. to her husband's home; it is used by | jugglers in feats of skill, by umpires | of wrestling matches for signals; | by singers to modulate their voices; it is presented to the youth on the | attalnment of his majority; and even the condemned man marches to the scaffold, fan in hand, Although the folding fan came to China by adoption its use in that country is almost as ancient as in Japan. Every important city of district in China has its character- istlc fan, distinctive in make, color, or design. These fans are made to tion of a deacon of the Greek | church a fan is.delivered to the can- | didate as a symbol of his sacred | office. The oldest known Christlan fan ing is preserved in the Cathe- 2l at Monza, h Milan, dating back to the Superstition has invested agical powers. Pilgrim- are made to Monza s of the year hecause | iching the fan is be- iieved to promote their marriage | ojects. Italy; | xth cnted by Japanese | The folding fan is believed to be the product of Japanese jngenuity but, like the non-folding variety, is not certain, Tradition has it that about 670 A, D. a fan- er's shrewish wife was awak- ened by a bat flying about her bed- room, reviled her sleeping hus- { band who ar. and light a the bat's wings The animal hich came con droppe picked 1l 1 to the up by the fan-m the | f its ribbed wing caused a I'rom this occurr: folding fan is horn, Although only is given more than credence, as the action of r is in conformity with of the Jupanese who derive from nafural ordinary motifs of the folding ivory. er-of-p nrecions tor arl, metals, » Dur various sille, skin = the 17th and conturios, so Asia wer ndustry. Lahorers Use Fans While Working The fan, which widens and ex- pands as t sticks of the fan radi- ite, lem e to the most every women of artisans use | nd work with sach other it is one of takes with her » of the I signers of nd employed in t! them wtih one hand t friends g with a wave of the he gifts the bride MORNING SPECIALS 7 to 12:3 2 22¢ n18¢ 49c 2 1),.\»256 2.33¢ 35c SHOULDERS, Lean Smoked \HOL.‘DERS, Best Maine ror \L()]‘“ , peck l'xo n l ut HAMBURG Rest Pure LARD ... RINSO ok. ceels 3 cans 29¢ pack'me 14¢ \hwd Pinea p|xlt can Dromedary Grapefruit Tuna Fish Butter Flake Crackers Rumford’s Powder 2Te—33¢ can 29¢ can 19¢ package 19¢ Baking h 29¢ BUTTER 2 lbs. 95¢ ED EGGS 2 dozen 87 ¢ Nut OLEO First Prize OLEO | 36¢ BALDWIN APPLES Ih and ¥ 30¢ ... 4 quarts | paper advertising fans sult every class and are adapted to the changing seasons, -in proportion to the quantity of breeze required. In warm weather the fan forms a part of the ceremony of tea drink- | ing. The host takes his fan as soon as the tea is drunk and, bowing to the company, says “I invite you to fan yourselves.” Each guest im- mediately uses his fan with great gravity, It is considered a breach of etiquette to be without a fan on ch occasfons or to refrain from accepting the invitation of the host. Queen Elizabeth has been called th god-mother of the fan. It is said |she handed fans as gifts to parting | that the | guests, and made it known fan was a suitable gift to a Queen. One of her inventories mentioned twenty-seven fans among her ef- fects and many of her portraits de- r as a fan enthusiast. Queen | \lr'(or’l sponsored the fan exhibi-| tion at South Kensington in 1870 | which revived the industry all over Europe. Million Dozen Imported by V. S. Electric driven, palm-leaf and are widely used in the United States. though lady's formal wardrobe fan, of feathers, is popular. palm leaf fans are imported from China: more than a million dozen were received fn one year. Manu- facturers make more than a llion eleetric fans annually. Most of these are used in this country. Japan s the largest buyer of our eleet fans; more were sold to that coun in 1924 than to France, England, China, Canada, and Mexi- o combined. There are no figures avalable to estimate the number of paper ad- vortising fans produced but it is be- licved they run into the millions an- nualiy. The article has become an important medium in the advertis- ing field. Theaters, chur s, lodg! halls and other places where peo- ple congregate, generally have their supplies of lvertising fans. Fifteen Small Ba;l:s in \hcbman Now Are Closed Mich.,, Nov. 2 ( Fif- teen smail private banks, the Bay Refuse imitations PROTECT Your Doctor and Yourself HILLIPS' Milk of Magnesm SAY “PHILLIPS” to your druggist, or you may not get genuine Phillips Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years. of genuine “Phillips” | | ilk of Marnesia” has been the U. H. Phillips Chemical Company and its cola, Lap.er’ Bay, Ogman and Tosco | !counties, have been closed within the last few days, pending a dissolu- tion of partnerships and reorganiza- Itions into state banks. No statement of assets, deposits or liabilities has been made. Frozen loans, damage to bean and beet cror-, a steady withdrawal of deposits in some of the banks and the necessity of conserving assets |was given as the reason for closing Most of the | haif- | known as | Socloty iy and company banks in Tus- |school at Danvers, Mass., at a meet-| them. Lodge’s Daughter Hopes Walsh Will Be Elected | 2 m David L. candidate for | loston, Nov. Walsh, democratic the seat in the United States sen- ae now held by Senator Willlam M. Butler, announced today that Mrs. Constance Lodge Willlams, daughter of the late Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, had sent him a mes- g of support. “You have my very best wishes for vour success at the polls tomor- row,” was the from Mrs. William last nigl : Senator Lodge, a republican rved for more than 30 years as a senator from Massachusotts. in Hamilton McMAHON William P. S. city was elect newly organi SURER McMahon of treasurer of 1 Connecticut \hlm i John's Preparato this message received | the | i Post’s Tire Shop 25-cent and 50-cent bottles contain full directions and uses, 8. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875, ing held in the Hotel Garde in Hart« ford last Thursday. A smoker and buffet lunch will be held at the Hotel Garde at 8 o'clock tomorrow, jevening to which all former stue !dents at the Danvers school are in- | vited. A committee was appointed to complete arrangements for the reception of the football team which | plays the Masses school of Stam- {ford team at the Hartford Velo~ {drome turday. FITTON—NOBLE Annie R. Noble, formerly of ity and Hartford, and James | T. Fitton, retired, of Prospect av« | enue, Hartford, obtained a marriage license in New York yesterday and will be married at the Little Church Around the Corner. Mr. Fitton was born in Rockville and his first wife died in 1924, Mrs. Noble was born in Hartford and has been twice married. Mrs, this Hundreds of pigeons, flocking in Ay intercourse with loiters on [the steps of the New York Fifth av- library, make it look llke & | enne Does your “Ford” Shimmy? 1 have a positive device to over come this. 15 FRANKLIN SQ. AMAZING SPECIAL. OFFER — FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY The Grand Prise $850 Set of Famons “High-Vac- uum” Attachments with each Eureka “purchased. (This great offer may be withdrawn at any time.) Just think of it! Only $1.00a week now buys the deep- cleaning, world-famous Grand Prize Eureka, after the usual small down payment has been made. Yes, that's the special offer we're making for a limited time only to those who accept quickly and take advantage of it. And remem- ber, the famous $8.50 set of “Higb-Vacuum” Attachments is given FREE with each Eureka purchased, in addition to the special easy terms. to l VACUUM CLEANER won highest awards in inter- national competition. Over 1,500,000 women use it regu- larly in their homes. It is the cleaner being purchased by more women today than any other single cleaner in the world, Phone 2 504 Today— Telephone today! Let us deliver a brand new Eureka right to your home—or come our storeand witness a com- plete demonstration. There is More Eurekas Sold Than Any Other Cleaner This is the famed Grand Prize Eureka that has repeatedly $0 to sure to be a tremendous re- sponse to this amazing offer— don'tdelay. Yes, we'll beglad let you try the Eureka free you buy. But hurry! BARRY & BAMFORTH, 19 Main Street Now is the Time to See Tomorrow’s Paper for Compleh. »Deulls ! Trade in Your Old Cleaner — Liberal Allowance ) That's What We Want FLORIDA SEALDSWELT CRANGES, doz. Red Star SWEET I“II'.\T()HS R s 256 Wil Head How Globe h Dung nip 29¢ LARGE RIPE BANANAS 25 ¢ dozen And—Men and Women Are Going to Get What They Want—And Get It Mighty Easily! ASKIN'S4 324 MAIN ST, _Usod There’s a Reaso: SOUND YELLOW ONIONS hs ]50 "n]l('\lllll\hl Lemons, dor. Heavy Grapefrait 3 for White ™ 6 Ihs Cahba Turnips Carrots or 6 ARCH ST, 8 W. MAIN e Cod Cranberrics, ry Serviece Everywhere Vaney Bleached Celery s qts s P head 20, MR JUKIORE—Littio MRs o-third the regular dose. Made \ho me ingredionts, then candy For children and ndults, .BLI [} 4 VOUI.MU“I‘T Deliy head 15¢ huneh 2 Pancy Imperor Grapes 2 Ths 25¢ 324 MAIN ST.,