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FOUGATORS SAP VARIOUS IDEAS Teachers From 25 States af, Convention Louisville, De¢. 3 (A—Those who direct the teaching of youth along vodational lines in 25 states today swapped ideas. The second day’s sesslon the first annual convention the Amgerjcan Vocational Association il- lustrated as its objects. to assume active national leadcrs tion of vocational education, to ren- der service to state and lo munities in ng and pre ing, and ¥ national forum for discussion of voe education in the word of Lee, Berkeley, Cal, presider 18 director of vocational educ at the University of California Charles A. Wardner, dir Jackson; Mich., saw good prog of industrial information being giv- en through medium of the movies as a suggestion to small city ) school teachers in teaching occun tions. Very good films were being sacured from advertising concer who furnished the films practically free, the school merely paying trans- portation. In his home town, Jackson, study of occupations was being quired ot all eighth grade studen the first semester, and in citles the study was a required sub- jeet, usually in either the eighth or ninth or tenth grades. Its value he found unquestioned. Agricultural Education ¢. H. Lane, Washington, D. C, chfet ot agricultural education serv- jcé, federal board for vocational education, detailing outstanding d velopments in 2 iltural educati during 1925-26, discovered vecation- al agriculture to be ‘“out of the woods” so far as teaching procedure ‘was concerned. /Home projects on an acr pib basis for all-day pu n¢ longer the program, Ter naw by a more extensive one fo “successful and businesslike pa tietpation on part of pupil in all ir portant activities of the type farming as is carried on in the re- spective communities where voca- tional agriculture instruction is of fored.” Chief Lane repor in twenty-five states | 8,489 enrollment in.part- culture work. Miss Ronella Spickard, in ‘home economics, Versailles, of of tion in tion of « d 445 schools instructor | oftered as cure for most of the ilis | of the world “the proper training of Giead. neart, and hand. The phy wealth which she found *“so necessary. for mental or spiritual well-being” would thus bv produced. \ “If we are to solve the social nnd economic problems of our nation, ’)'! necessary that we raise the <’|n dards of family life among our peo- | pte. Home economles teachers must | [ be the leaders.” Tiie Teiite bindbmia eetion obs| erating - simultaneously with commerclal education, vocational guidan industrial education, civil- jan vocational rehabilitat and \grienltural educatio ctions, 1d a jamfull prosr state home ec ‘o augmented by Anna . R d study and parent American Home Xconomics tion, Washington, D. C., and | COACHES COMPARED Ti} COLLEGE PROFS Speaker Says Latter Couldn't : Stand §ailg£rl icism New York, Dee. 3 (A—Could col- stand the criticism | s directors | Miss 1son tor profe: ind close k of major football coaches and hoid their jobs? Dr. president of the Alumni Fed- of seru w loway, eration New York university 1oe 1 to undergra issing the benefits of football life at a dinner w York university foot- “Chick"” ‘x\lov ay told | ort | e over cl al in- better teaching with chan last n the play the adv on b use of er contact many teachers of the would vote to stand the same ir jobs as Mee- Gil Dobie, and in America to- “There are few cachers like one at New York uni- ity who dismissed his class a zo with the injunction he couldn't hold their at- and interest, he wished them 1d the of the reci- the football ow 1y,” he the | characterizes the pre-session scram- deral [ found the fleld bynched but radio g ch leaders as | tavo the interest of members of congress. |action after congress convenes Mon- y that is given the | Lee Gal- | environ- | | RADIO CONTROL 1S PROGRAN'S LEADER * Takes Gongmswnal Right of Way Over Taxes, Farms Dec. 3 (M—The as- race which Washington, pect of a free-for-all ble of potential legislation today itrol nosing a bit ahead of such s as tax reduction, farm re- lief and alien property disposition in Whether congress intends quick un to exact a measure designed to | ate the radio industry and end $he ohidt that 1l making life miser- able for radio fans, cannot ibe de- termined at the present stage of the race, but, the rooters for orderly broadcasting profess to be encour- “Besides the army of unattached rooters, the gallery pulling for | lio bill includes President Cool- , Secretary Hoover and many 10 and representatives “‘\0' ke to listen in themselves and hope | to lighten the burden imposed by the broadcasting interference on the romelife of many tinkering constit- | uents. President Coolidge’s desire for an early settlement of the radio diffi- ities has been reiterated to Chair- Scott of the house committee hat handles such legislation, and Representative White of Maine, its ranking republican member, end both are hopeful that the senate end | house can be brought together on| a bill which will provide a solution. | How It Stands Now. | As the matter stands, the house has passed a measure to give the| commerce department control over | broadcasting, and the senate has| approved a substitute providing for regulation by an independent com- | mission. When representatives of | the two chambers met last spring to | see what could be done in the way | o smoothing out their differences, it | wag found that the house didn't Ji | the senate’s idea at all, and the sen- | Mee- | see \‘]’u a real teacher Wom tMen’s and Young Men S @HETS ‘and @*m.us Fine fabrics; strikingly smart pat- terns; correctly styled models. Sizes for Men of all builds. Most unusual values. § e r———————— BO§S’ LongPants SUitS $12.50 Extraordinary values en’s and Misses’ | must come from e felt the same way about the| 's plan, Meanwhile, court de- | c Mmu ave shorn the commerce de. partment of much of the authority | 0 ls thought it possessed th the result that little or nothing 3 been done since W The first move toward action at| the fmpending session of congress | the senate and | ‘24° Built for real wear NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1926. house conferees who still have the conflicting bills under.consideration. Several ways out of the difficulty are seen. If the wrangle threatens to continue too long, Scott thinks the house and senate might adopt a resoltition prepared by White for temporary control until permanent legislation can be enacted. The house is not willing to yield on the ger- eral principles incorporated in its bill, he feels, but it is possibit that a compromise can be worked out glving an independent commission authority to prescribe broadcasting rules which would be administered by the commerce department, At the same time, another current of thought is pressing into the con- troversy. It is being sponsored by Representdtive Bloom, democrat, New York, who is against both the| senate and house plans, elther of which, he holds, would encourage | the development of a radio monopoly that would make all other monopo- lies 100k puny in comparison, W should be done, in his opinion, is to appoint a “Radio Cza not now eonnected in any way with the government, who would be di- rected to give the problem his entire | attention until the development of\ radio and aviation makes necessary as he believes it will, the operation of a new administrative department with a sec ary of air in the cab- inet. TO WORK LONGER HOURS Manchester, Dec. 33 (P— The federation of master cotton pinners has decided that, from Monday, the spinning hours in th Amerlcan section shall increased from 34 to 35 w. can spinners are a their pledge to observe yarn prices, D8. READ HERALD CLASST FOR YOUR WANTS ‘D ADS an expert | minimum WESLEVAN HAVING. ANNUAL SESSIONS Third Yearly Educational Con- Terence There Middletown, Dec. 3. — The third intercollegiate parley gon Amerlcng college education will be held at Wesleyan university today, Saturday and Sunday. It was at the parley last year that the proposal of the one year athletic rule, which attract- ed wide attention throughout the | country was made, and as a result, much interest is felt in this year's| gathering. Representatives from | many colleges and universities will be guests at Wesleyan for the occa- sion. angements for the parley | | have been made by a committee of | students headed by Harvey Cram of Washington, D. C., president of the senfor class as Wesleyan, | The dclegates will be welcomed | this ng by President James Lukens McConoughy |the university, in Fayerweather | eymnasium and will hear Dr. Wil- liam T. Foster speak on “An Evalua- | tion of American Colleges.” On Saturday, George A. Coe will speak on the subject, “What Do Students Really Want?” The parley will meet at eleven o'clock, Satur- | Aay morning in Memorial Chapel to Dr. Boyd H. Bode, who will on “The College Man's Philosophy of Life.” In the aiternoon, Dr. Bode will | again speak, this time having as his | subject, “What, Then, Shall We Do | hear About 1t?” In the evening, in Fayer- | £ TURDAY SPECIALS AT to ameliorate | the overcrowding of the ether. I Zt'U be here any minule.! SR T didn't take her long to find out that the New Britain Market is the best place to buy Poultry. MORNING SPECIALS 7 to 12:30 Bt . afe fff'o"fl'fi?’izs » 19¢ . | 9 C bs 25(: . 2ms ch Lean Smohed SHOULDERS Fresh Cut HAMBURG Best Pure LARD . SHORT SIRLOIN PORTERHOUS Steaks All Day GENUINE SPRI opecnals S AR AT, T NG LAMB SALE SMALL LEGS GENUINE LAMB .... b 35¢ LOIN LAMB CHOPS . LAMB FORES ....... ROAST PORK (smallloins) ............ b LEAN BONELESS POT ROAST . FANCY ROASTING CH 39¢ 18¢ 28¢ R KENS BONELESS RIB ROASTS . SUGAR CURED BACON S"IALL FRESH HAMS . VEAL FOR STEW Pork Feet .. . 1h 10c Spare Ribs . h 22¢ Lean Boiling Beef b 10c lh lSc Best Frankforts .. .. fl) . I l(lc ™ 15¢ b 30c Cottage Hams Lean Corned Beef Beef Liver 'l’onk Qausage ¢ WHITE LOAF FLOUR st | ding along behalf of | & weather Gymnasium, the parley will take up the subject of intercollegiate athletics under the direction of Ernest Hatch Wilkins. On Sunday morning Bishop Francis J. McCon- nell of Pittsburgh, author af the 1919 steel strike report, will preach in Memorial Chapel, discussing col- lege education as a humanizing fac- tor in industry. The flnal session, Sunday after- noon, will hear Robert Frost, well- known American poet on “The Manumitted Student.” In addition to these regular sessions, ample op- poftunity will be given for group discussions on the various problems before the parley. Alien, in Rags, Found Almost Frozen to Death St. Albans, Vt., Dec. 3.—(#—Plod- the Richford road in near-zero weather clad only in an old shirt, frayed trousers and a pair of castoff shoes, a man giving his name as Gannio Precillo of Albany, N. Y., was picked up by the immi- gration patrol today and brought to the county jail here. Precillo was frozen into semi-consciousness by the time he reached the jail and of- ficials expressed the belief that he is an alien, who crossed the line last night in an attempt to walk to Albany. Mat McGrath Becomes N. Y. Police Captain New York, Dec. 3 (—The insig- nia of a captain of, New York's| “finest” today perched on the cap | of Mat J. McGrath, America's great- | est hammer thrower, as a reward for i years of “pavement pounding” in the | police department. Only a few weeks ago, McGrath was raised from the rank of sergeant to lieutenant. Yesterday Commis- | | sioner McLaughlin made the star of . four Olymplc teams % full captain. He was assigned to traffic at a sal- ary of $4,000 a year, Princetonians Want to Take Ug Boxing Again Princeton, N. J., Dec. 3 P—The undergraduate body at Princeton has petitioned the faculty athletic committee to relnstate boxing as a Tiger spbrt after 20 years of banish- ment. A reservation attached to the pe- tition suggests that a conference with Yale, Army and Navy be ar- ranged to draw up rules governing intercollegiate competition in the ring. Fresh Maryland Turkets, 80c lb, Guaranteed Market 70 W. Maln, —advt. NEW BRITA IN’S LEADING FURRIERS 45 Select Fur Coats ORTY-FIVE women will benefit by this special selling tomorrow. These coats were se- lected from our regular stock and reduced for this one day event. y New Britain American Broadtail Coat. A wonderful value. Fox trimmed 3Fox B Pony Coats. Beaver Fitch, Kolin- sky trimmed. A remarkable value. Brown Caracul Coats. Australian Opossum Coats. Smart lines. Special at American Opossum Hudson Seal Coats Squirrel Trimmed. A Large Selection JACQUETTES rimmed. (Not paw Caracul) Offering Values that Cannot Be Found in all $175 $115 $165 $225 $95 $185 of of Muskrat, Caracul, Civet Cat, etc. COATS Cogts of distinction, both in styl!r)g and in attractive uses of rich luxurious furs 10 bs §3¢ | 25 Ths $1...: 3 $75.00 $295 $95 $85 large pkg. 19(, 3cans 9;‘- cans Z3¢ 2 cans June Pe 2 cans Tomatoes can: Tip Matches 6 boxes c Babbitt's Cleanser ., 3 cans Rumford’'s Baking Powder 1b. Kellogg's Corn Flakes phs. Vugmla Sweet Panm‘m Flour . vir 2 pl\gs. 27 ¢ DE'\IO]\‘ETR \'HO\ ON VIRGINIA SW FLT PRODU C'l\ \T TH’S STOPL Fresh 6 r.\mdc 95(: WEDGWOOD B . LCTED EGGS 2 doyen 87¢ Good Luck OLEO|Nucoa Nut ()l EO | First Prize OLEO CREAMERY Parksdale Large SEL 32¢ 3 30¢ Calif. Sunkist ORANGES a Heavy Grapefr it 296 dozen 3 for 250 o LARGE RIPE BANANAS ......... dozen 29¢ SOUND YELLOW ONIONS | .4 1bs 13¢ Yellow Globe Turnips 6 Ibs. 25¢ peck 20¢ Carrots or Parsnips .. 2 bunch 20¢ Sweet Potatoes quart 18¢c Cape Cod Cranberries 2 q head 15¢ mperor Grapes . .. . Ih. 3¢ Sugar Evaporated 1\ 11!( e (‘ampbell’e Beam and Tomato boup New DRESSES Every new style is art. istically developed in $SL 775 unique way;e ke = fizl Squirrel Coats. Siberian skins in Cocoa Color and summer Ermine shade. Challenge Milk . Fancy Red Salmon . Tuna Fish . Meaty Prunes . y Macaroni . Not-A-Seed Raising Shredded Wheat 2 cans \u ar (ul'll can . can 2 Ibs 2 pkgs. 2 phes. .. pkg. 5¢ Fancy 20¢ 25¢ 10¢ 29¢ 10¢ Muskrat Coats. Handsome lined. Fine matched pelts. Marmink Coats. Dark pelts. Beautifully matched. 5 ]usz come in, to the man m ;,l?{qy C’Z leges of our Charge I’ arge and we you the privi- @1 ch Grey Caracul Coats trimmed with Fox. (Not paw Caracul) $ 1 25 10 Northern Seal Coats. Self, Squlrrel and Fox Trimmed Not to be duplicated elsewhere, CONNECTICUT FURRIERS INCORPORATED 70 WEST MAIN STREET NEXT TO CAPITOL THEATER I}i’»\RTFORD STORE ANDrFACTORY, 90-92 CHURCH STREET snd ena Payment Plan, i u Fresh Cut Spinach . ... : Bleached Celery * Sweet Green Peppers Iceherg Lettuce 5c¢! Solld Flead Cabbage . s