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NINE SITES FOR PRODUCE MARKET Council Committee Considers Location for Farmers’ Exchange That the farm produce mark: must be taken away from Commer- cial street was agreed by the mem- bers of the special committee ap- pointed to obtain a location other than a clty street at the first meat- Chief W. J. Noble of the fire department and Chief W, (. Hart of the police department told the committee the gathering of rarmers and peddlers every morning interferes with traftic on Commer- ciul street and should be prohibited. Officer T. C. Dolan, who did duty at arket last summer, gave simi- testimony and members of the committee devoted but little time to 1 sing the present location, ng last evening. on North and would rent for § 11 for $65,000. n Nort Y . He plans a street and between nd the old Butler ying the owner of the latter. wished to obtain titl e tract property on and North street between the corner and th icr property would be nec Mr. Liegey does not own pieces. issway r on properties, city the corner Spring and a brick block - old But- sary these v Harry H. Milkowitz, rep- ng Milkowitz, Richman and owners of the H. R. Walk- r property on Commercial street, said part of the property might be 1sed for a market, although his personal feeling was that such place should he located a the center of the city. He was not prepared to fix a price for rental of the property but if the city was interest, he would raze some of the wooden buildings on the prop- erty and rent a space 100 feet front- age by 225 feet depth for $2,000 a year. Alderman Nair reported that Mayor: Weld had received a sugges- estate property in the rear of the| bank be used. Paul Zehler suggest- | ed the Glen street dumping grounds | and Courcilman Sablotsky mrn-‘ |tioned the Clifton E. Davenport| |property on Stanley street near the | unused stone quarry. | Councilman Cadwell suggested the old Burritt school yard between the school building and Landers, Frary |& Clark’s factory on East Main street, and also the American Hard- |ware corporation property on E st | ain street, where the “acid hole” | was formerly 'located. Alderman alr reported that Morris Cohn's property at the south end of Main street might be available. Solomon Shurberg appeared befor: the committee and offered his pro- perty in the rear of the Mohican Market on Main street. He said there 18 a space about 100x200 fect wvailable there, but he would not consider leasing it unless a sizeable was paid, on account of the ilities for developing or selling | property. Attorney Monroe §. G ing Gordon Broth said the present location on Commercial | street need n changed. holesalers in fr ! so1 be sh pe ha wa Poss Li the x ion, repre- | W loc l40 unans conditions | md Le brought ! itney busses eet. who intro- agreed with d out that n cannot The mar- trect, the other passing through te ilman Sablotsk ch resolution, d ey, and poir New . ey bus rou ket should not be on any councilman argued and the members agreed. 2 On suggestion of Alderman Nair, Couneiln Sablotsky will investi- the Davenport and Liegey pro- positions, Councilman Buckley will gate the Booth estate and Glen L t propositions, Councilman Cad well the American Hardware corpor- ation and Burritt school properties, Councilman Tay the Cohn and Shur- | berg properties and Alderman Nair | the H. I. Walker Co., proposition. and reports will be presented at the mecting of the committee next Mon- day evening at 7:30 o'clock. During the meeting, Chief Noblr took occasion to compliment Gordon Brothers for thelr readiness to re- lie cial and Center streets Councf sel ca th pe a H: when fire'a |alarms sound. He said they have frequently hastened into the street and moved trucks in front of their tion from Cashier F. C. Kelly of the}phce of business so that the fire ap- City National Bank that the BODtthar&l\ll might pass in safety. MOVIE TESTS MADE {Rate Him blonde for ideal screen purposes, it for his signature American producers, De Paris fould sign up the Ameri- has spent the last week trying to interest Lindbergh in a proposition NEW BRITAIN-DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1927. LINDBERGH ALWAYS Only 40 Per Cent for Film Work Paris, June 2 (UP)—A mera being no respecter of per»} ns, screen tests of Charles Lind- rgh in Paris have given the wor- ipped alrman a rating of only 40 r cent, it was learned today. The ndsome young aviator too movie | is 19 explained. Yet movie producers ndbergh mname his own figures to a contract, hen he returns to the American | ssy today he will find | » wnd screen offers on Ambas- | dor Herri desk totalling $1.- 0,000, all of which have been ered and probably will I iin so. While the would let | here American flyer was in London, movie directors called him | he from Paris asking for in- and offering certified Lindbergh would not even Ik to them. He simply §sn't in- rested. Amazed at his refusals, stage and reen magnates in Parls wers 1 rviews acks, doubling last-minute offers, hoping he may still change his mind. not limited to The Casino The offers were n hero at his own price, while German film producer, Spey, in Paris guaranteeing him 90 r cent of the gross receipts from two-reel aerfal thriller. HAROLD LLOYD ILL Hollywood, Calif., June 2 (UP)— arold Lloyd, film cemedian, has been ordered to his bed with pleu- risy. His wife is recuperating from bronchit] traftic congestion at Commer- | Gloria, and their daughter, as almost recovered from severe cold. b e e ————— ] “No wonder everybody 1s | talking about Rinso! It's the best work saver I ever heard of. LIt certainly is popular in my neighborhood. With Rinso you don't need to do the least hit of hard rubbing. Just soak the clothes in Rinso suds and the dirt comes out by itself. Even holling isn’t necessary for Rinso alone gots clothes just as white and bright as new. And you'll find that you have much less mending te do when you wash this way be- cause the clothes aren't rub- bed threadbare on the wash- board.” EMILE MAZEIKA, 27 Connerton St., New Britain, Conn, Millions use Rinso. Thousands ‘write us letters like this one. Whiter than ever yet this wash was neither scrubbed nor boiled ! OST women can’t believe it until they see for themselves. A whiter wash, a brighter \\'flsh. Not rubbed and scrubbed threadbare. Not even boiled. Just soaked and Women are astonished when they usc Rinso for the first time. It whitens without boiling—sterilizes, too! It doesn’t make frothy soap bubbles, but stirs into thick, creamysuds. It makes the water soapy all throug| tinsed so gently! actually soaks the wash brighter and cleaner than it could be scrubbed. The most soiled parts come snowy with just a touch between the fingers. No more frayed cuffs and edges! Clothes Tast longer this gentle way. Thick suds in hardest water Rinso, the granulated laundry soap, is dif- ferent from anything you've ever used. It wash, in half thy Fine in washing machines! Rinso is so wonderful in washers that the makers of 30 leading machines endorse it for safety and for a brighter wash. Try it once and see! Get it today for your very next washday! In these rich suds, dirt and stains float off so easily, All you need to do is rinse— for a whiter wash than ever! ruin and age your hands by scrubbing. Tests prove Rinso safe. acids or bleaches of any description. s And cconomical! washday—no bar soaps, chips or powders. Try Rinso next washday for a whiter h—even the hardest water. No need to Safe—and so economical! Contains no I’s all you nced on e time, without scrubbing! For cconomy and best results, follow the easy directions on the package. HAD SELFREL JANGE Success of New - York-Paris OF YANKEE FLIER! g i o By T THE LIFE STORY OF CHARLES A. LINDBERGH Who flew to fame in 3 By Morris De Haven United Press Staff Corre: (Copyright 1927 by Press) 4 hours. Tracy spondent the United CHAPTER THREE Self-reitance, one of acteristics of Charles A. the char- Lindbergh 1which enabled him to fly alone from New York to Paris and become an him early in life. When he was a mont mother took him back to bergh home nesota, from Detroit, Mi he was born February 4, There the Lindbergh family on a farm on the west bank of the begin a wide Mississippi river just-south of the| feity limits of Little Falls. of remarkable beauty. rm house was a comfortable located with ment, surrounded trees Charlic was hig father at Little Falls, |international hero, was developed in h old his the Lind- M ch., where 1902, lived It was a The one story, white structure, with spacious hase- on sloping ground, and with woods and the river nearby. only son land they became the closest com- panions. . As soon as Charlie was old enougi, his father began taking him on excursions into the nearby woods. The boy learned to notice the trees and flowers, and particularly the animal life of the vicinity. By the time he was five years old the amazing sense of dircction which, reinforced only by a compass !enabled him to fiy a course across the Atlantic a8 straight as that of a |homing pigeon, was Weveloped. | He and his father were on one of their excursions into the woods a mile or more away from the Lind- bergh home. The father wished to go farther to look over some land Ibut, fearing the boy would tire, left | him on the trail. “You stay there for a few min- utes,” the older Lindbergh told him. {“I'm going on a bit and will come back pretty soon and get you here.” Boy Was Missing But when the father returned, the | boy was gone. The older Lindbergh | searched through the woods but |could find nb trace of his son. Frightened, and pleturing all sorts ot misfortunes hefalling the boy, |Lindbergh hurried home, intending |to enlist the aid of neighbors and arch. But five-year-old Charlie greeted Ihim at the gate. | “How did you ather asked. | “When we were walking, you told me that the sun always goes down in the west and we were walking)| the get here?” a got tired of waiting, so I just | walked straight away from the sun |and I came right home here.” That same year Lindbergh was { elected to congress, and the family | moved to Washington in 1907 where, for a decade a part of each year was spent. The | the White House and young Charlie came in contact with that famous gang of theaded by Quentin Roosevelt, whose father was then president. He play- {ed much on ‘the White House | grounds and ¥~said to have had a | part = ly place inthose days. Lindberghs lived near Washington youngsters in some of the happenings hich made the White House a live- Quentin and Charlie When Quentin Roosevelt 1ode his | once familiar pony into the White House and brow-beat an attendant | into giving it a ride on an elevator— |an incident | never tired | Lindbergh is said to have been one | of the gang that was egging Quentin on. which the of president recalling—Charlie F. C. Henry, a Washington drug- | glst, recalls that Charlie Lindberh I { the neighborhood who, with Quentin Roosevelt, bought their sundaes at | his drug store. Quentin developed at one time a hahit of charging the | sundaes to the White House account, something which again amused the president, but of which he is said to have disapproved as a bad habit for as one of the many small boys of boy of few years. Charlie Lindbergh is also credited in Washington with having had a straight at the * sun,” Charles ex-|{part, along with Quentin Roosevelt plained. ’snd a number of others, in cutting the light wires and plunging the ‘White House in darkness on one famous occasion. During most of the time Lind- bergh lived in Washington, air- planes were still considerable of a novelty. The Wrights were carrying on their experiments, as was Curtiss, but planes were used chiefly to thrill crowds and flying was a highly | hazardous occupation. But Lind- | bergh even then was interested. in “flying machines” as was Quentin ! Roosevelt, who was destined to die in the war, shot down in a battle with a German plane. Never Repressed During these years the boy's par- ents, probably with much wisdom, | permitted the lad to go his way about as his own desire dictated. He was not repressed. There were few “don’ts” in the Lindbergh house- hold. Sclentists and psychologists put great weight upon that phase of his training. They say it developed in him the self-reliance which he first showed when, at five years of age, he walked away from the sun and | 80 found his way back home. It also, |they say, made stronger in him the jcourage and the determination which he had inherited. In school he was quiet, unassum- ling and modest. Itisrecorded that he cared little for English, com- position, or such subjects, but was much interested in sciences and in imalhematl(‘s he was always among {the leaders of his class. His teacher, Miss Elizabeth E. Marshall, while he went to school in Washington, descrimed him as a quiet, unassuming lad, yet distinctl, “individual” Even as a youth Charlie Lindbergh was never one of the herd, those who knew him then, recall. To his Washington school mates he was heese” Lindbergh, so named ‘“because his name was so much like Limberger cheese.” . 1% sounds incredible i byt~ \th.tinlingm son ts of u pair of flies are ) il five hun- dEnd million™ wrymu.g- carrier. FLY-TOX kills fies. Encry botth ruaranteed. The Connecticut Light and Power Company ANNOUNCES is safe to say that in a MORE ELECTRIC RANGES IN USF. THAN ALL OTHER KINDS Combined! Becdause Women Want to Cook Electrically " .. Everything can he cooked better — There are no flames or fumes --There is no soot, fo dirt, no ashes ~- The heat is accurately controlled -- automatically if desired Tke Greatest Electric Range Sale Ever Offered to its Customers Electric Cooking has won the hearts of over a* million women! The Electric Range has been developed to a point whereby it is little if any more evpensive to operate than most any other cooking appliance. 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