New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1927, Page 4

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3 ‘ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1927, !FLASHES OF LIFE: PENN. ASSEMBLY | MEMBER WANTS FORMAL ATMOSPHERE By the Associated Press. there's a way to attract help. M. L. Paris—Vivid color’splotches, dizzy Fogg and R. G. Mills, marooned in Fl'iefld' Ki]lstnncs slenderer than ever and fur-|the Bahamas while hunting a miss- y ther abbreviation are features of the|ing barge in their seaplane, poured modes for summer now on display gasoline on a mango tree and set it in the modernist dressmaking sa- afire. The flare attracted a ship. lons. TRAGEDY STALKS ON GOLF LINKS Man Shoots 0l 8an Diego—An eight pound radio Los Angeles, Feb. 8 (P—The story | Brockton, Mass.—A check for $1.-' et in seaplane SN Mot equip- of a tragedy on the golf links was | 000,000 is on deposit here for the ped with a 17-pound hand genera- woven today today into the annals of | purpose ot providing education for tor has communicated with radio the royal and ancient game in Los needy and relleving distress. It giations in United States, England, Angeles as police sought to learn came from Edgar B. Davis of Lu- France, Japan and Alaska. why Andrew Jankowski, Tolede, |ling Tex., oil operator formerly a 4 Ohio, automobile dealer, yes resident of Brockton, and is made| . . | New York—Carl Laemmle is of- shot and probably fatally out to the Pllgrim - Foundatlon, | roring 13 prizes danually. ASEregnt. his old friend and busin: hich hd autablished [f2cipm 12 bessan Ennually, Aeerorni: T et { ‘imgpru\‘omlnt of movies. The larg levue club links, and bt & g veme: ovies. - el s, and 1s :\.sylo‘ro, \'\ —h'rv_\o distinguish- gt §s $2,500. Writers on papers Mrs. Jankowski, who was with CSCTHemen who have heen friends and magazines anywhere may com- them in & threcsome and who wit- | Srec 'Y n Chicago and f pete, rose to wealth W different fields are | nessed the shooting, was under the % 3 to be linked —ore ‘closely. Miss| panhury — Spark from machinery A th, then killed | | CHURCH SCHOOLS PROVING WORTH Reports on Semester Show Satis- factory Progress Made Reports on the completion of the first semester of the second year's' United Week Day made at a worhk in Church schools meeting of the board of directors at Trinity Methodist Episcopal church the were last evening. secretary semester closed with a registration She also reported on work done in homes and described the ef- forts made to give service to children who had no Sunday school connec- of 724. of the schools, tion. Miss Estelle Dickinson, executive said the of the personnal committee, and su- pervisor of eighth grade girls in the church schools, reported the follow- ing new teachers for the second semester: Miss Jennie Wessel, seventh grade; Mrs. Chester Hale, seventh grade; Miss Helen Bromley, fifth grade; Mrs. Walter Johnston, fifth grade; Miss Olive Lydall, fifth grade; Mrs. Burnam Mann, fourth grade; Fred- eriz Lockwood, seventh grade. Four of these are additional and the oth- ers fill vacancies. Per Pupil Cost is $6.50 Donald L. Bartlett, treasurer, re- ported an expenditure of $4,688.97 for the year 1926 which represents a per pupil cost of $6.50. In com- menting upon this, Mr. Bartlett said th ¢ he regarded this per pupil cost as being low considering tke amount and quality of work done in the schools. “During the first sethester of thiz¢Christians working out for them- of | selves the Christian way of life un- school year, the supervision grades seven and eight has been a;der the guidance source of genuine satisfaction,” said Rev. Warren M. of religlous education at the First Blodgett, minister|ly. Week Day church achools in his re- port. “The reasons for this are: Firat, the use of the Y. W. C. A. for the eighth grade girls and the Y. M. C. A. for the elghth grade boys has given us an adequate equipment and leadership for the type of work we wish to do. Second, the experience, training and ablility of the teachers has been unusual Third, the curri- of the puplls. “The teachers of grades seven and elght have shown exceptional abil- it They have been able to organ- ize their lessons from abundant source materials and an outline | which has been furnished them. Th pils in mind throughout all the work. The classes have been con- scious of, their comradeship. They | have been small groups of young of sympathetic| leaders who have guided them wise-| The teaching staff has {ricluded: Clarence H. Barnes, Pauline Bauer, culum followed has met the needs| - have Kept their individual pu-| Mrs, Frank Preston, Gladys Shaler, Mr.. E. C. Stockwell, Mrs. Alexan- der Tomkins and Laura Weible. Of these fourteen persons, ten are pro- fessional workers in religion or al- lied flelds. Frederic L. Fay, director of re- ligious education at the South church, reported on the program carried out in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades at that church, Stanley Memorial church and the First church. Mrs. E. C. Stockwell, supervisor of the third grade, reported the topics of the lessons taught during Novem.- ber and December. The following were present at the metjng alst evening: Mrs. Philip B. Stanley, Mrs. H. Sheldon Munger, Louis P. Slade, Howard Doolittle, Walter F. Fletcher, A. Tyson Ha cock, Mrs. Willard Ohquist, Rev. Warren M. Blodgett, Miss E. Ger- trude Rogers, Rev. Raymond N, Gilman, Donald L. Bartlett, Rev. Willlam H. Alderson, Oscar A. Marsh, Frederic L. Fay, Miss Estelle Dickinson and Mrs. E. C. Stockwell. BARTHELMESS LAID UP Beverly Hills, Cal, Feb, 8 (P— Richard Barthelmess, film actor, is contined to his home as the wesult of a breaking of a small bone in the foot while playing tennis yester- day. Itching, Annoying Skin lirjtations Apply Zemo, Healing Liquid, Easy to Use When applied as directed Zemo cffectively and quickly stops [tch. ing, and heals Skin Irritations, Sores, Burns, Wounds and Chafing. Zemo penetrates. cleanses and soothes the skin. It is a clean. de- pendable, healing liquid. convenient to use any time. 60c and $1.00. care of a physician after having be- | 2 ¢ | L [Narcissa Vanderlip, daughter Of yjamed for fire damage of $3.000 in | Miss E. Gertrude Verne C. Braddon, Mrs. R. T. Chap-| READ HERALD CI-ASSIFI‘ED ADS come hysterical and unable to tell a | 1 > A e | Frank A. Vanderlip. banker, 18 (0 qstimate of Lincoln Dry Cleaning Police believe Jankowski was MArry Julian L. Strect, Jr., son of company, seized with a fit of temporary in- | the author. The young man is start-| sanity, precipitated by an argument |iN8 his career as his father and| New Haven — The trials of mid- over the golf cards. prospective father-in-law did. He's year examinations are forgotten as Mrs. Jankowski told Deputy @ reporter. | Yale students turn attention to en- Sheriff Stensland her husband flared |tertaining 450 of “America’s Best” into a rage, cried out that he was go- erson City, Mo.—Legislative here for junior promenade and ac- ing to kill her and drew a pistol. |static is preventing radio-casting of companying festivities. Callahan, she said, leaped between | debate on an anti-evolution bill. The | X her and her angered husband at the | house by 69 to 37 took it off the air.| New Haven — Monoxide gas from critical moment and dropped with a | | running automobile in closed garage bullet in his head. Harrisburg, Pa.—Elwood J. Turn- ' causes serlous fliness of Josef Adler, Jankowski then turned his weapon | er, who wants the state's legislators yjce.president of Congress Bank and on himself and sent a bullet into his r formal morning dress, 15 Tryst company. temple. cre about it. He appeared | ¢ Mrs. Jankowski's story was cor- | floor of the house in frock Heinaia s Gt by Sibwand Wells, riped trousers and W Marsden does not present resignation a caretaker of the court, who said th & Qlaviond In his te BN e faors olesh of Madison, lesein ho saw Jankowski kill himself. tetarnition! in s Tapel s < S e d The ‘woman's screa i o e esumloye R I dieagTeR e RIS K ha oat) . bard of selectmen, other players who ru: e el & Bl . both men lying on the green. Jan- | | kowsk! was dead when they arrived. Callahan was taken to an emergen- cy hosital. Jankowski racently suffered a nervous breakdown and came here with his wife a month ago hoping to : sy regain his health. Callahan ac- |20d shall be a garden spot for the 12, Corupaulad ‘thern | entire nation. | Jankowski and Callahan had been close friends and business associates for several years. Besides his widow, leaves a son, Andrew Jr. St. Joseph’s Academy Michigan. on the New Haven — Judge Arthur W. Hartford — Leglslative leaders Rome—Dreams of fascist archi- complete plans to give right of way making Rome a rival of 1o legislation advocated by Governor York are over. Mussolini is mbull to protect state in event of h notlce that the city must fyel crisis from bituminous coal untainted by industrialism workers' strike, scheduled for April out w H | Hartford — America's youth will New York—Cosmetic forecast by not be willing to serve the country il Fuchs, artist: The time is not in event of war with Mexico, Mrs. distant when the girls will change Jjosepha Whitney of New Haven says, the colors of their ¢ 3 calling it “not good sportsmanship.” New Haven—One popular plece | Jankowski who is in Monroe, Collinsville — Crashing into the ale Prom festivities which jail house with his automobilewhile best girls from various alleged to be under influence of li- “all Me Pet quor, Justice of Peace John Ceder of am for Burlington incurs fine of $125. al clubs’ concert announc- it as a revival from 1850. MRS, BRUCE VERY ILL Daughter of Sccretary Mellon Plans To Return To U. S. | th Rome, Feb. 8 (UP)—Alisa Mel- | ed lon Bruce, only daughter of Andr ‘W. Mellon, secretary of the ury, is very ill today near Berne, Sound Beach — After serving the | First Congregational church as pas- Honolulu—When the marines land tor for 15 years, R Lewis W. and get the situation in hand it Barney, Ph. D. is evicted as result Switzerland, and will start for the must be under orders. Corporal/of church sch n said to have start- United States within a few days. | Dick ton is in irons aboard [ed 20 years David K. Bruce, son of Senator | the transport Chaumont, bound for | 3 _— Bruce of Maryland, to whom Miss' China via Honolulu. He stowed| Meriden — Pleading not guilty to Mellon was married last spring, told | himself aboard at San Ditgo with embezzlement from First National the United Press today of Mrs.|a regiment to which he did not be- bank where he was employed as a Bruce's iliness. long. |clerk, Eugene P. Saleski is bound Bruce, who is attached to the| over to federal court under bonds United States emba here, has| lot of folks 0f52,000. been granted two months leave of g to let poor Corneliug absence by the state department. Jr, sterve to death on said he would leave Thursday own cooking. He has received | Berne to join Mrs. Bruce and to ac- a meal ticket and Invitations to company her to the United St cken d to say nothing of| offers by mail and in person to cook | sy 7= Banish Pimples 7”5' u) By Using In Thibet 1t is the o Cutlcura tom of na- for him. | A tives when meeting friends to etick | ! |! Soap to Cleanse out their tongues as a mark of re-| Tort Lauderdale, Tla—When a| Ointment to Heal spect. |plane is stuck in & desolate spot| hembiZoMEREW Shaving Stick | ! B. C. PORTER SONS’ MID-WINTER SALE Our collection of authentic Colonial Reproductions is the finest in the state. Windsor Chairs | Four Post Beds 0 Four Post $10.00 Windsor Now $7.75 or Now $9.95 jack Wood . 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PORTER SONS “CONNECTICUT'S BEST FURNITURE STORE" Rogers, presi- B Church of Christ, and supervisor of dent of the Y. W. C. A, chairman|grades seven and eight in the United man, Frances Littell, Bryce L. Long, FOR YOUR WANTS | POR SKIN (RRITATIC $5000022Contest | prize winning true story IN True Story Magazine for March appears the most powerful true story ever written. It is a tale so outstandingly different, so virile, so potent with truth and life and love and conflict, so deeply moving, so powerfully compelling that by unan- imous decision of the judges it was awarded the first prize in the mammoth $50,000 true story contest recently con- ducted by True Story Magazinein which upwards of fifty thousand manuscripts were received from all over the world. A Tale of the Cumberland Mountains It is a story of the city and of the wilderness. Of a gently reared girl accustomed to the refine- ment and culture of genteel city life setabruptly. The Author says: “Stronger Than Death” is an account of the tragic experience that befell a dear friend when she, a girl of culture and refine- ment, accepted the position as teacher in a mission school deep in the fastnesses of the Cum- berland Mountains. “I have written in the first per- son, first because the rules of the contest require that all sto- ries submitted be in the first person, and second because 1 have set it down so nearly the way she herself told it to me that I feel justified in presenting it as coming from her own lips.” i Sk o R: ruc down amid the Kentucky lumber camps, there to be swept off her feet, blinded to the realities of life, by forces over which she had no con- trol. Of a community of rough-hewn moun- men who feared as a part of each jealousy. tain folk rent asunder by the coming among them of a girl whose sweet dignity and reserve, whose stylish mode of dress, everything about her so different from the girls they knew, aroused in the hearts of the river men and lumber jacks a raging storm of conflict. A tale of rushing, log-jammed streams. Of primitive passions surging in the breasts of neither God, nor man, nor devil. Who constantly courted violent death day’s work. A tale of tears and blood and tragedy, of hate and love and Of a titanic battle for a bewildered woman’s heart. While over all hung the dread Death.” menace of the double-bitted ax, one blade of which was red. It is entitled “Stronger Than The Author A World War Veteran Written by Mr. H. M. Suther- land, world war veteran and resi- dent of a Virginia town in the foot-hillsof the Cumberland Moun- taing, it is the tragic drama that befell one of his dearest friends. Margery, about whom the story revolves, did not feel that she could do the story justice. The events were all too recent—so close that her perspective was lost. But she told it all to Mr. Sutherland. And he in turn, using rare discrimina- tion out of his sympathy and under- standing, has set down what is without doubt the most powerful true story ever written. Not a pretty story. Powerful stories rarely are. But a deeply moving story, a grip- ping story, an epic tale told just as it was lived. Easily the outstanding story of all the fifty thousand re- ceived in the greatest true story con- test ever conducted. Youwillfind itin True Story Magazine for March, now on sale, at all newsstands. Other Living True Stories in the March Issue Searching For a Love Harbor Stronger Than Death Can I Trust Him Now? People Will Talk The Price of Secret Love What Love Has Done For Me The Treacherous Kiss 1 Didn’t Want Pity The Secret Shadow My Terrible Mistake Fools’ Gold Dare I Marry Again? Searing Memories My Reckless Romance Was It Infatuation? Things Wives Tell If You're Thinking of Divorce “Stronger Than Death,” together with the fifteen other absorbing tales from life, every one true, every one actually lived by the men and women of whose lives it is a part, makes the March number of True Story Maga- zine one of the outstanding issues of its history. Get your copy today before the local supply is exhausted. qu will find in it hours of intens- est interest. The Greatest Newsstand Sale in the World The Distribution of This Issue Is 2,400,000 Copies MARGERY from the depths of whose grief-strichen heart comes this lonely cry. o “John Devignet still pleads with me to marry him and let him take me away from the hillsand the drudg- ery of teaching in the little mission school, but it seems to me that the decision has been taken from my hands by fate. I want to go with him—oh, God, I'd give my soul 1o go, for I love him with every fibre of my being, but I can’t drive away the picture of George's wistful, ashen, hopeless, pleading face, across that tawny current of spray and logs. “T've tried to forget, but the memoryclings toovividly. Is it that I must sacrifice m ppiness in atonement for the crime that I have done? GEORGE ELLIS Tall, diffident with strangers, slow of speech, this “Boss™ of the lumbermen was also big and handsome. And one of the most fearless, most daring men that ever swung an ax or rode the Jogs in the boiling cur- rent of thetreacherous river. His word wis law among his men. Buw: could he make it carry weight with & woman—and such a woman as Margery? JOHN DEVIGNET College-bred, son of the owner of the logging open ations, John Devignet represented a side of life of which George Ellis knew but litle. When he came to the logging camps as general superintendent, the men were prepared to laugh at him as acitified dandy who would quake at every shadow. But they found that he could take care of himself in war or love. Use the Coupon if You Cannot Get True Story at Your Newsstand MACFADDEN PUBLICATIONS, m.-I | 64k St. and B'way, New York City. 1 wish (o become familiar with True Story Magazine. Please enter my name to receive the next five issues beginning with the March Number. ] am enclosing $1.00 in full payment. (1f s0u prsfer to examine the maga- :lv\; b:la{« \nbuly'\bmui simply mail 25 cents and we will send you one Ohe Mareh oot onced - T <P o

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