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MARIE BROADASTS " PAREWELL TODAY Last Day of Visit Here to Be Exentful One New York, Nov. 23 (P—Queen Marie of Rumania will bid farewell to her American friends by radio this evening. She will broadcast through sta- tion WMCA between 5:30 and 6 p. m., from the home of Willlam Nelson Cromwell, where she will at- tend a conference with directors of the Soclety of Friends of Rumania. Mr. Cromwell is president of the soclety. As yesterday, the royal schedule was arranged to utilize every min- ute of the final day here, but with not guite so much speed. Today seven motorcycle patrolmen, the quen’s entire police escort, yester- day, are nursing painful bruises from accide One by one they dropped out of the column in an effort to keep up With the speed of sometimes 60 miles per hour that the royal drivers set. The day was one of confusion as Leaving the home Mitchell of Tuxedo, kfast, the queen motored to the grave of Theodore Roosevelt on Long Island, only to find that a wWreath she had ordered had not arrived. She then called at the home of Mrs. Roose- but found that she was “not at velt home."” The roy econ at the William B. party then had lunch- ome of Mr. and Mrs. the latter the former Princess Xenia of Russia, After which Mr. Leeds took the ueen and the princess Tleana out »n Huntington Bay in his speed- . the Wildcat and Lady Luck. e queen drove one of the boats and apparently enjoyed the experi- ence. re returning to the Aitchell home in Tuxedo for dinner, n had tea at the home of international bank- eodore Roosevelt, Jr. _eeds, the quee! Tor the first time in several days Prince Nicolas was today a mem- ber of his mother's party again. He arrived from Cleveland, yesterday. and was taken directly from Jersey City terminal of the Balti- inore and Ohio railroad to the home of Mr. Mitchell. The final day's program included a tour of New York harbor on & vacht owned by the Standard Oil company of New Jersey, followed by a luncheon at the headquarters at 26 Broadway, a Visit to the mew New York Edison company plant where the queen will press a lever that will start the machinery for the firts time, tea at the home of Mrs, Cornelius Van- derbilt, and in the evening, dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vin- cent Astor. After the dinner the royal party will board the steamship Berengaria, on which they sail to- morrow morning at 10 o'clock. NEWINGTON NEWS Members of the Grange will go to Wethersfleld tonight where the local organization will be responsible for two numbers of the progrum. The first movies to be shown in several years at the Congregational church chapel, were put on the screen last night at 7:30. Miss| Mary C. Welles was in charge and | ndard Oil | taxation. This is an increase of 59 over that of last year. | There will be a football game at | the Center Thanksgiving morning at | 9:30 between a team from the Junc- | tion and one from the Center. | Walter L. Morgan is {11 at his home at the Center. The next meeting of the Woman's club of Maple Hill will be a Christ- | mas party at the home of Mrs. A. §. | Grant on Golf street. Mrs. J. H.! Latham will speak on “Books For | Christmas Giving” and inexpensive glfts will be exchanged. Mrs. Grant will be assisted by Mrs. Willlam Middlemas and Mrs. M. Nordstrom. |ale have roturned after spending the | week-end in Boston. Mr. and Mrs Goodale’s son, Dr. Raymond Goodale, |ana wite sailed from Boston Sunday | for Beirut, Syria, where Dr. Goodale will remain for two years as a pro- fessor in the college there. [ MAN HIT BY AUTO RUNS AWAY Jacob P. Dodoich of Prentice I street, Plainville, while driving south on Main street about 7:10 o'clock |1ast evening, struck a man who ran | from the west slde of the street and | knocked him down. Supernumerary Officer James M. McCue reported | that it was impossible to learn the | man's name, so quickly did he leave | the scene. Mr. Dodolch was driving at the rate of 10 miles an hour at :lhe time, the officer reported. | 1 { MOTHER GRAY'S POWDERS | BENEFIT MANY CHILDREN Thousands of mothers have fonnd Mother Gray's Sweet Powders an excellent remedy for children com- plaining of Headaches, Colds, Fev- | erishness, Worms, Stomach Trou- |Dles and other irregularities from which children suffer these days and excellent results are accomplished bt its use. They break up colds and regulate the bowels. Used and recommended by Mothers for over |30 years. Sold by Druggists every. {where. Trial package FREE. Ad- dress, Mother Gray Co, Le Roy, | } BB s e e e e e s raTes re s e s T sat s oar e iar ees rottstets st It eractacapeaoatiasorstattrltratertass Linen Luncheon Sets An unusual value just in grace the Thanksgiving match—assorted allover flo terns—hemstitched finish. Regular $4.95 value i | | | | | | | '# I Botany {# ! Wool Repp Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin H. Good- | 54x70 Cloth with six Napkins to REDUCED FOR WED. ONLY —two sensational values WED. day before Ju child on char |trio was arre The PAPER MONEY NOW WILL LAST LONGE V. Friday by |state and Danbury police charged |\with naving stolen antique furniture |from the country home of E. T. {Haviland in this town. The date | * |\hen the furniture was taken is not “Working Lile” Increased Filty ire s, vne certain or e I ling articles were said to have been Per Gent |located in the house occupled, by the trio in Danbury. Washington, Nov. 23.—(®—The working life of American paper money has been increased fifty per ' STRENGTH IN PRAYER ", ot P. Chaplain Thinks This fs This was one of the successful ex- | periments among the manifold | activities described in the annual| report today of the bureau of | andards. | Other successful experiments in- cluded the determination of mew gauges t which the 1,000,000 d ferent possible co! B or other m One Reason Team Has Played So ‘Well This Fall, 25 (@ ity of Penn have p his scason 1 to the p John R. Hart, Philadelphia, of the Uni vania football team rely and c! | cause they have reso cr of prayer, the I | chaplain of the red and b men, said toc Mr. Hart ov, be- dded that no mass prayer meetings have been held or had the men ever prayed for victory, but each one, in the privacy of his own room, had asked for a “finer and truer expression life while | they were in action.” “It has been our practice h Pennsylvania,” the chaplain instill and encourage our football men to pray it out the best way they ,.'m the difficulties of deal- | €30, Tathcr than hold private prayer meetings. The latter have too often 5,000,000 pounds of : e e e and superficial, With | through the long cooling system to | MOt LLRnSRany erfecti the previous attempts | V&M : R D P'| " Mr. Hart said the final miutes be- | “In testing and certifying gauges |f07e every football game should be | |devoted to instructions to the play- and thermometers, the burcau dur- | 1°V0X00 10 TSN e ing the last year performed 180,000 [ ¢S and not topr: different operations, collecting fees | R T of $675,000 therefor. The balance of Norway, Now “Wet, its work ranged from testing tires J Traa 0 | for official automobiles to working | ('09d W 1“3“‘5} Field | out ballistic problems of the war de- | Glasgow, Nov. (P—The whis- y trade in Sc anticipat- in the operation of ma- : o L ing a good demand from Norw | * whiskey following that coun- Man Wanted for D?urdcr jection of prohibition. Prep- s are being made for the ex- | Surrenders to Police rort ion of blends which, accor New Fairfild, No ®—John | IN8 to advices from Norway, will be | Collom, Mrs. ily R a Mrs, in demand as soon parliament Nettie Casselle were plad under | & bonds of $5,000 each for their ap-| = % |pearance at the next term of supe- | READ HERALD CLASSI frior court when they appeared to- | FOR YOUR WANT continuous te: tification of all the delicate measuring instru- ments which are utilized by art, in- dustry, and professional life. Though unsuccessful 1in the pas! the burcau will continue trylng to produce the largest teles flector ever made from opti It has endeavored to make a perf 61 inches in diamefer, of at! public ty | nd is other | ISOUND VIEW HAS ' DISASTROUS FIRE | Seven Cottages, Valued at About S0, Buned | 0la Lyme, Conn, Nov. 23 (A — | Pumping water from the ocean, fire- |men from Old Lyme, New London | and Niantic fought a blaze at Sound View last night which threatened to |sweep through the summer colony | with its 200 cottages. Sevéh cot- |tages were destroyed by the fire be- fore the firemen, aided by a shift |14 the wind, were able to gain con- trol of the sweeping flames. An- building damaged. The was estimated at between $15,- and $20,0 The fire was discovered by Costa Fntos and Postmaster Dexter Case, found one of the cottages of the blaze could not be determined. The men fought the flames and carried furniture from y of surrounding cottages a call for aid was sent to se Lyme, New London and Nian- | t | The wind was in the north ! when the fire broke out and was every indication that the blaze would sweep through the long rows of cottages. The wind shifted to the north, however, and this aided the fire fighters. When the firemen arrive |found that it would be nece mp water from the ocean, was done, and, with the ald chemic; rolled after it had swept through ie seven buildings, | Two of the cottages burned were owned by Dr. Fannie Radom, Hart- ford, two by A. Plaisokowski of Hartford, and one by M. F. Ma- honey of Hartford. The fire started in one of the cot- by Mr. Adams. mounted high in the air and »d hundreds of persons from irby towns. wo of the cottages lost were y Dr. Fannie Radom of 336 venue; two by Frank Ad- No. 136 Barker street; two A. Plaisokowski and one by M Mahoney of No. 30 Farmington lavenue, all of Hartford: ere they ry to This of tages owned flame , the blaze was finally con- | (PRISONERS IN FIGHT 1! IN NEW HAVEN JAIL |One scrapper, Not Liking Position | in Supper Line, Knocks An- | | other Out of Place New Haven, Conn., Nov. 23 (P— FA fist fight at the county jail caused |some excitement among the prison- lers last night but-was subdued be- fore much damage was done. | Charles Sullivan, who has served ltwo months of a six months’ sen- tence, imposed by the superior court of New oner as lines were forming at the |jail for supper. It was the second fight there within tho past few weeks, and Sullivan also was in the rst encounter. At that time he was nocked down by a prisoner named Malone, who given an additional 130 days to s e, When Sullivan joined the line at the jail last night, he apparently did not like his position and pulled | Francis Byrns out of his place. Byrns resented this and attempted to remonstrate. Sull n then, with out warning, drove his fist to By e, flooring the latter. Byrns was ¢ to continue the fight but |guards by this time had grabbed {both of the men and the supper Ibell closed the argument. 3yrns was sentence to six months in jail by the superior court in Wa- terbury on September 21 after he had been convicted of statutory bur- ary. r Important Diabetes Discover Philadelphia, Nov. 23 (P—Dr. | David Ri 1, senior member of the medical ff of the Philadelphi General hospital and head of t ‘ Anothe sen, floored a fellow pris- | WHEELER FIGHTING Anent Medicinal Stocks ‘Washington, Nov. 23 Treasury Department, government’s prohibition | gal whiskey. law administration, | His superior, | | of the mec | placed temporarily that a definite program of replace- | ment should be worked out. | Mr. Mellon has no sympathy for the proposal to import whiskey from He believes that it will be a pure supply of | abroad. casier to assure | liquor if it is manufactured in this country. He also feels that domestic manufacture would be easier to control from the viewpoint of illicit diversions. Audrews’ plan calls for creation | by congress at the approaching ses- sion of congress of a government supervised private corporation to take over the existing supply of 15, | 000,000 gallons of medicinal whiskey land begin at once the manufacture | of more liquor WHISKEY QUOTAS {Opposes Andrews and Mellon (A —The seat of the enforce- ment machinery and the Anti-Saloon League have different ideas about the necessity for manufacturing le- Lincoln C. Andrews, the assistant |treasury secretary in charge of dry | fecls that the | manufacture of 3,000,000 gallons of whiskey is needed at once to replen- ish the diminshing medicinal stocks. ecrtary Mellon, takes iyne B. Wheeler, general coun- sel for the league, differs from the two dry chiefs, contends a shortage nal stock could be re- by importation of liquor from abroad, and asserts to replenish this The | | medical department at the Univer- | diminishing stock, which, he esti- v of Pennsylvania, has announced | mates, will be exhausted in five “as important as that of | years. |a discovery linsulin” for the treatment of xhu-i Mr. Wheeler says the league is betes. | maintaining an en mind” with | e announcement was made In | respect to authorizing manufacture | appealing to city council for addi- | of whiskey in this country again, | tional sums for the hospital labora- | but adds there is a “possibility” [tory. Dr. Ricsman informed coun-|that a Dbill being drafted to carry it Lie was not privileged at|out Andrews' proposal might meet time to reveal the nature of the | obiections to the re-opening of the overy, which he said, had been | distilleries. » by a physician at the gencral| Aside from this however, the An- Hospital after more then two years|dreWs! plan can be expected fo fur- |t ¥ | nish congress with a new vehicle for | reaching the prohibition question. time to table— ral pat- . / 7 /% / Z $3.84 _ e T 7P . /4///// Women’ 13IERIIIINIIIINNISIAIIIIIIINIISISNIISINISIINNILL, /// s Silk Hose Irregulars of our regular $1.95 quality —made by one ONLY $1.64 » shades. of America’s leading Hosiery manufacturers—smartly made in the season’s newest Fall and Winter r DAVIDSON AND LEVENTHAL = A Pre-Holida | ffrng of Exceptional Values for Tomorrow Only 2320888, Hteesaatis przatzesestesssaizetarizsapieast ) ) 7 Ietrztastestestenitizatisdiseesss (9578, one made to sell for less than $6. —all smartly made—in the ng Fall shades—si WEDNESDAY sizes to 4 years only. OLD THEATER MAN DIES. Brunswick, M Nov. 23 P — Harry E. Gustin, 56, for a quarter of a century associated with New Eng-+ land theatrical interests, died here yesterday. He manager Keith's, the Bijou and Old National in Boston and Keith’s at Manchester, N. H. He was associated for a time with Fa- | mous Players and also was engaged in the theatrical business in New York city. English women are wearing shoes with uppers of reptile skins. Grip, enza andasa Preventive The Safe and Proven Remedy. The First and Original Cold and Grip Tgfiet Proven Safe for more than . a Quarter of a Century, Price 30c. The box bears this signature C. Y bpore y(/'n/ce 7669 — Children’s Winter Coats Only 14 garments in this lot—not .00 ew $4.95 § —buy them for Xmas gifts Women’s Hand Made Lingerie WED. ONLY $1.00- _—3,000 ._vm‘ds—rsoft .\\oolcn fabrie, with a narrow repp weave—42 inches wide—a practical wearing fabric for dresses, coats and wraps WEDNESDAY Only 100 pieces in this splendid group of Gowns and Chemise made of fine quality Nainsook daintily trimmed, with hand made em- —24 new Fall shades. Regular $1.98 value the proceeds went to the Consumers’ | league. This is the first of a series| ot pictures which will be shown at the chapel. The attendance was very | good last night, the majority being | children. The orchestra of the| Children’s Home rendered two se- | lections. C(?lr‘letg: $1.10 yd. 1 —-.].500 yards, new Fall colors, heavy pebble weave—40 inches wide—very much in vogue for dresses, blouses and coat linings— colors are Jungle Green, Chanel Red, Brown, Tan, Rose, Copen, Black, Navy. ¥ broidery, in countless number of styles to select from. L | Ladies Crepe Kimonos $2 095 i An excellent opportunity to purchase a beautiful Kimono. Made of Box Loom Crepe—Scrpentine Crepe and Figured Japanese pat- terns—all smartly trimmed either with lace, satin and embroidery. All pretty colors. WED. ONLY WED. ONLY Ready-to-Wear Offerings for Wednesday Tax Coliector Everett B. Proud- man reports that bills for personal taxes have been mailed. There are 1,525 persons who are eligible for | Regular $1.49 value Former values to $5.95 Turkish Bath Towels Heavy double loop Towels; large size, 22x44 — choice of Rose, Blue, Gold | woven horders. Soft ahsorbent quality. Regular 49c value PRICED FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY 3 8 C Each Sterling French Spun JERSEY FROCKS Just about 75 of these beautiful dresses in this splendid group—smartly created in one and two-piece models of all wool French Spun Jersey in two-tone effects —some with pin tucks, others braided rts with box and kick pleats. Miss Muffet Prints REDUCED FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY 28¢ )0 yards of new Fall hable prints for chil- dren’s school dre: rompers, house dre drapes, etc.; 32 inches wide—in over 25 differ- ent patterns. Regular 39¢ value | tamped Pillow Cases Stamped to embroider on a heavy 42- inch tubing. Hemstitch for crochet or scalloped finish. Reg. values $1.25 and $1.39 pair WEDNESDAY'S SELLING FOR 95 C pair Linen Table Damask Heavy Irish Silver Bleached Damask — 64 inches wide. floral patterns. tegular $1.25 value SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY 9 5 C vard Boy’s Novelty Suits WEDNESDAY ONLY $6.50 An entire stock of boys’ beautiful Novelty Suits, in Middy and Oliver Twist models; made of fine woolens in plain patterns and mixtures— Sacrificing these Suits to make room for Xmas goods. Formerly sold as high as $10.00 WEDNESDAY ONLY SPORT COATS 192.50 A special selected lot of Handsome Sport Coat of fine plaids, checks fur collars—smart p e I T T e T S ST T T LT T T IS IS0 ST S ST E ST R SR SIS Pain is 50 often unnecessary SUFFERED WITH PAIN N NECK AND SHOULDERS After three days’ home treatment got, complete relief Linen ssorted Salt and Peppers Individual sizes—heautiful patterns. SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY i 2—39¢ of Former values to $10.95 men folks 50c patterns and checks— —specials for the Men’s Novelty Sox A beautiful assortment stripes and plaids—in all s —third floor holiday + $1.98- atly | Bake pies in Pyrex Plates—it will taste much offerings Former Values WED. 3 to $19.75 SELLING WED., ONLY Pyrex Pie Plates —in a silver frame—neatly finished with two side handles. your Thanksgiving better. English Tea Pots 59C kR An exceptional offering in Tea Pots, in beautiful plain stripe dec- orations—splendid assortment of sizes to select from. WED. ONL Following asevere attack of theumatie fever, a New York girl suffered for days with excruciating pain in her 2 of smart ne zes to 1114, Regular 69¢ ! . Beautifully made and mixtures, trimmed with large luxurious kets, full lined. ying everything else,” she | s, ““my mother persuaded me to Jet her apply Sloan’s Liniment, after three days I felt no further pai It is amazing what Sloan’s w 1o relieve pain. This is because it doesn’t just deaden the nerves. It stirs up the body to throw off the cause of the trouble, Apply gently without rubbing. Ine stantly it sends a healing tide of fresh, new blood to the place that hurts. In just a few minutes the pain stops. So leasant and easy o use too. Get a ruggists—35 cents, Men’s Flannel Pajamas '\n chci]‘flnt Pajama, beautitul] Full cut in all sizes. $1.69 tailoved in Scotch plaid effects— sresssressssrssis WED. ONLY WED. ONLY Women’s Rayon Vests Made of fine quality Rayon. Well tailored, in all sizes to 44—in Flesh, White, Peach and Cc 94 Re, WED DAY . SIS St LRI SIS AL