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the jaw.” Just then the lady who owned the clothes rushes outa the block with a broom in one hand and | stove poker in the other and asks me what am 1 doing with her laun- | dary, but 1 had aiready lett as I didn't \\'a"l any more arguments. A short time later I stops with ffl flat tire and while removing the rm\ a man comes over to watch me vk, and asks me if I have got a flat tire, “No" I answers sarcastical- “Its the tire's birthda; and she's celebrating with a ‘blow-out. " He only looks at me and drawls, as T LU Dusk 10~ | uggles with the inner tube, “You morrow may see Commander Rich- | ..ty he having a time of it but ard B. Byrd's monoplane Americi| g, .o the engine ain't in sympathy, sart on it sclentifc fght o Parin | Kiging from the way' it knocka.” i p CScRaon - | “Listen closely, mister,” I says, “That bergh i ‘;‘r‘l""":;;"'g"’x‘;x Mo lcft lengine ain't Knocking, its applaud- Rogseyels Hield: L sland, short- |jpe» * “[ heen thinking” he says, Iy after dawn, Commander Byrd is | yeqn 1 Tntovrini; Rl el considering a departure with his | e Aathehand three flying companions at about 6 you think you get a b so far during your life you've had p. m. He feels his plane would | thercby reach Newfoundland with ' two headaches.” With that he leaves me and goes over to the side of the the dawn and Paris before sunset. I winds and local rain storms | road and brings forth a lawn mower, which 1 hadn't noticed before, and elong the north Atlantic board | begins pushing 1t up and down the and a low pressure area from New- | concrete highway as thongh he was foundland to the Irish coast indi- | cated a hop-off would not be wise | mowing a lawn. On the front of the lawn mower they was a large before tomorrow, Byrd said last | kitchen window attached. night. I watches him for a minute with His flight, he explained, will be |a blank cartridge expression on my an effort to learn the sccrets of the |map as this was too deep for me. storms, winds and fogs of the At- lantic ocean as they affect aerial BYRD MAY START TOMORROW NIGHT Considers Hoppmg 0 About' Dusk New York, June 20 (A—D; ! with him un Finally my curiosity gets the best of navigation. me <o I walks back and forth “One of the things we are to prove.” he said, “is that by got- trying | @ 1 1 gets cnough cour- » to ask, “Say, mister, what is the idea of having the window attached to the lawn mower.” He n ting weather predictions based on | : reports from ships at sea one can | [100TS me with the answer, tell at any time what the weather is | 0 Kevp the grass from flying up in across the Atlantic, which will s be | % 2 Just - E uy in uniform comes an invaluable aid to trans-Atlantic | DER Zgn) 1 muligiin o s alonk which 1 tiought was a chauf- ~ Z fer or something but when he comes In this connection he commended clc 1 ds I ord ‘Kee " the Radio Corporation of America | CI0%°T T reads the word “Keeper’ on i A sCTRars T s cap, and when he says “T've been 3 its “very valuable" reports from | |ooing for you” I beats it as I iners. 8 2 wasn't sure whether he was looking Storms, according to the for me or the other fella but T was calculations. may be turned to taking no chances. Anyways I had vantage. He said storm arcas re- | onough of wisecracks for the day. volve counter-clockwise as they Yours most respectful travel and. flying on the south- A5y Dale ern rim of a storm 'ra\!’lmz east, OF MURDER PLOT carried toward Europe at a high speed.” Morse Won't Believe Daughter Had Marked Thres Byrd stated a &cientific station would be established this summer by Professor W. B. Hobbs, of the Uni- J.. June 20 () Morse, 84, in his 40- flier's ad- versity of Michigan, on the Green- land ice cap, which is believed to be 1,500 miles long and 500 wide and “has undoubtedly some effect on thas north Atlantic weather.” Such a station would be an important sup- plement to the ships' radio reports, Byrd thinks. He said he hoped to discover whether the fog banks encountercd by Lindbergh and Chamberlin ex- tend from the later level to the clouds or only to a height which leaves a clear space between cloud | and fog. He declared he would also | %o © 0T W SERE G0 b o try to establish the truth of theorles 1} o' " L 4 Bt Aayihe abtetives that Atlantic winds differ in velocity | \(po haq posed as gunmen in per- and direction at different altitudes. | oting an alleged geath plot with Byrd left here for Boston last:j.r niajd, Mamie Todd, a negress. night to receive an honorary de-|rpe majd, who is 21 years old, had gree of master of science from Tufts | jeen with the Morse family for 18 college. He intended to return late years, having be.n taken from a pro- father a.. 1 mother but was later cen- the first plan was abandoned because Has a Day of Gracks, Wise and | ivschtoner. today. | tectory in Philadelphia. tered against Miss Morse's sister, of the death of Mrs. Morse two . . . The police believe that Miss Morse Otherwise, in Flivyer New Brunswick, N. —The faith of George wealthy retired farmer, ye mained unshaken despite her arrest {on a charge of conspiracy to kill three members of her sister's family. M Morse was freed on bail of ey Authorities said the conspiracy ANDY HAS IJ]ST was originally directed against the 9 | Mrs. Grace Dey, her husband. Eimer; HIS RABBIT S Fflfl’r(mm their son, Robert. Officials said = months ago and hecause the daugh- ter felt her father would not live feared her father's estate, estimated to her sister and brother-in-law. DPear Mary Ann. Morse characterized They ain’t anything interesting to|Plot as “a frame-up pure and write to you except maybe to tell |simple.” “I do not believe my daugh- you that I have lost the watch charm | With the lucky rabbit’s foot which |to Kill me or my daughter, Grace, you gave me on my birthday and |and her husband. The whole affair since then everything seems to go|comes from the mind of the maid. wrong, especially when I'm out| “There is no reason why any of flivvering. 1 ain't superstitious or|my children should plot to take my anything like that, but when I tells|life. I have given them each thou- you what happens yesterday maybe |sands of dollars. Two years ago, for you'll agree that another rabbit's!instance, I gave both Bessie and foot watch charm wouldn't do me |Grace $10,000 any harm, although I'm not hinting [ “It is utterly ridiculous,” said the that you should get me one. accused woman. “The story must As T leaves New Britain and drives | have come from the imagination of past Barnesdale I notices a fella |my maid.” Miss Morse appeared per- leading a cow across the road direct- | fectly composed as she faced report- ly in front of me to greener pastures | €T and I has the brakes do their stuff,; “We are in the dark—it's miracu- but not in time to prevent the left [lous that we escaped from death if front fender from walloping the cow | this story is true” said Dey. “We a glancing blow, which didn't do|have always iclt quite friendly to- any harm, except to hurt her feel- | ward Bessie. We simply cannot un- ings. This fella was peeved and |derstand it.” wanted me to pay damages or| The Morse farm something, hut T points to the fliv-|Plains, 15 miles outside ver fender which her hip bones had | Brunswick. dented, also to the broken headlight | join where she kicked her hoofs in try-| A said they received the | ing to get even, and says that I|first inkling of the scheme when a should be the one to collect, instead |negro workman on the Morse farm of paying. |reported the maid had offered him I also told him that the flivver [a large smn of money to kill Mr. and wasn't used to being abused by Mrs, Detectives said they mals, and that she’d never be were 600 by the maid, as a to look another car in th wgain | fir rent on $4,000 which until I'd taken her to repair | they were to receive for the Killings. shop. He argues with d says|The officers said that after her ar- it's a fine country whers lla t | rest she told them she had acted on escort a cow across the road without of Miss Morse. They having her insulted by second-h ey had been investigating the flivvers. [ gets mad and ry the last two weeks. socked him on the d was arrested Friday | calms down when T ¢ said, she rode with bigger than n “Leadi 1 to a spot where | across the highways was to have heen while the path of an on route Bruns- | fair to dumb anir the flivver,” I say © maid is being held with- they ain’t any then T asks, a warning is in Prospect of New \m | face th me request cultured woman politically and L “T didn't think unity. “And why not?" T demand He grins sarcastically “Because the cow had Leaving the dumb ones for con answers | Chicago Heights Gunmen -| Shoot Down Another Man pany I rattles along and stops at Chicago, June P — Chicago first store I s to bu smoke and M ts gangster's slew as I was leaving the stor | vietim two years of warfare in of clothes which was placed | that they shot down lessly on the railing of the % vear old boarding story verandah topples over and | night. lands on the top of my head. (T was| glad that it was clothes that foll, and not flower pots or the ice bhox.) Wearing apparel of all kinds was scattered aronnd n nd I'm kinda embarrassed as I p them up. A bystander who witnessed the cident was holding onto his ston suburh wi T, last n s Joseph men fired pistols when shotg I3 four zuns and ssing automobile, He fell his vear old daughter, }I rieda, came running down the steps toward him Three weeks ago H an Carelli, with Doth hands and langhing, and [bailiff of the Chicago Heights eity suggested that T sue the awner of the | Court, was shot in almost block. “On what charges?” T asks [identical ma soldly. “On charges of assault and| Although recog battery.” he grins. I thinks he's try-[of the ganzsters ing ta kid me and [ asks, “Do|county police were at a loss to find vou think that I could collect any-|a motive for the Lauer slaying. So thing?” And he answers “You ought | far as they know he had no under- to t; able to, you got rhria socks on world conngctions. 4 | house lon him from a p: W as down ng the methods the suburban and <0 “Thats | old daughter, Bessie, today re- | at more than $100,000, would be left | the alleged | |ter entertained any idea of plotting | NEW BRITAIN DAICY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1927. GREETS CODLIDGES for First Time Rapid City, 8. D., June 20 (P— experience which this western coun- try had to offer, President Coolidge entered into his second week in the black hi mer White House is an area exactly to his liKing. He has fished successfally in its racing mountain streams known the ‘romance of its pine covered hills, hat, and he has heard from a 20- year-old boy a simplo statement as | to why people should go to church. Perhaps more than any other, the president’s first Sunday in the black hills was an experience he long will remember, but the day was hardly less unusual for himself than It was | tor Rolf Lium, the big blonde youth | who preached the first sermon of his life yesterday, before the president of the United States. The youth stood behind the pul- pit of the Hermosa Congregational ering as typical of this western coun- |try as was the little building set up on the prairies for simple living folks who worship God in a simple way The day was one which probably never will be forgotten in that town of several hundred people, a town which years ago was famous for its shooting scrapes between miners and the cowboys of the section. The word has been sent out from the summer White House several days ago that the President and Mrs, Coolidge would attend the Hermosa church and a large gathering of photographers, tourists and local townspeople was on hand. The smell of pine was in the air, great flocks of drifting clouds tempered an otherwise hot sun. Inside, the church was spotless. rose of the prairles Lium, who came to Hermosa a few days ago to earn enough money as a senior in Carleton college, next vear, was calm as a veteran. felt any misgivings he shielded them | under a sunny countenance. He called his flock into prayer, led the hymns and preached a ser- mon without hesitation from notes |while the President and Mrs. Cool- idge listened attentively. After it | was all over he received the congrat- {ulations of his distinguished guests and posed with them repeatedly for pictures. Mrs. Coolidge joined in the sing- ing of all the hy dent remained |soon a rancher's wife, encouraged | by Mre. Coolidge’s singing, picked up the mclody in a deep alto, and the others soon followed. While the collection plates were beting passed a young woman played at the upright piano. Mr. Coolidge |dropped a five dollar bill into the | where the remai: der of his party was sitting, its metal responded to the clinking of silver dollars. President and Mrs. Coolidge ex- pect to attend the church every Sun- |day and the young preacher ac- knowledged that the prospect “is an awful strain.” He had spent several long nights pondering over yester- thought of keeping up the record of a good beginning plainly gave him some anxjety. After ehurch, which the president attended in a high silk hat, Mr. and | Mrs. Coolidge returned to the state |game lodge for luncheon and spent | the balance of the day in rest on the | spacious front porch. NEWINGTON NEWS For the first time in the history of the Newington Home for Crip- pled Children, Winchell Smith of Farmington will not present the diplomas to the graduating class. Mr. Smith is abroad. It was expect- ed that Governor Trumbull would | address the class and present the diplomas this afternoon. The gov- ernor s in New York city but it was STUDENT PREACHER 90 Year 01d Rolf Lium in Pulpit Eager to partake of all of the novel | convinced that the sum- |the thrill that an easterner receives | from heing dressed in a ten-gallon | will also speak. It is h antici- pation that the boys and girls of the home await the coming of Mr. Nicholson as they remember the in- spiring talk which he gave last year at the 1926 class banquet. The class | ivy will be planted immediately after | the class banquet. The public is cordially invited to | | attend the graduation exercises which will be held tomorrow after- | noon at the home. Miss Tommasoni’s Pupils Give Recital Tonight Pupils of Miss Florence Ruth Tommasoni will give a piano recital | |this evening at the famp school auditorium. Miss Josephine Tom- masoni, mezzo-soprano, will assist. The program will be as folows: ! Spanish Dance, Op. 12, No. 1— Vs Moszkowski Lillian and Anna Casale First Violet Ernest “ ooks Mazurka, Op. No. 2 Daisy Dennison Valse Caprice Mary and Robert Mautner Spring Song ..... Mendelssohn Olive Prelle Op. Zelio (a!*olino Meyer-Helmund | . Bohm | | Potonaise, . Bohm | Dialogue .. | ) | Valse, Op. $3 WORLD PERMANENT, WILL NOT PERISH[ Bible Student Says Change Will Be in Social Order According to J. A. Baeuerlein ol Brooklyn, N. Y., who spoke yester- day afternoon at Odd Fellows hall, a new order of things is being in- troduced in the world. “This new order of things.” he said, “is referted to in the Bible as a new world. It will be so different ! from the world in which we have| lived in the past, although the earth will still be the same, that it is some- times spoken of as a new carth, us- | ing that expression in a figurative or symbolical sense. The beginning of a new world, then, means simply a change in the affairs of men, but a change so far-reaching as to over- turn and eliminate all existing in- stitutions to make way for better | fer condiuivns. > Bible, in the third chapter of the Apostle Peter's second letter, points out that the new world, or order of things, is to be a permanent one, and shows further that there | | United States have been two other ‘worlds’ which were not permanent. He states, Melodie, Op. 3, No. 1 .. Rubinstein ‘The world that then was, being 1 Anna Casale | | Catherine Wacker church and looked out upon a gath- | Glass fish bowls held the (oldm‘ as a preacher to put him through | It e | ns, but the presi- | ent. There was a | Ihush when the singing began, but | {plate and as it went along the aisle | | day's ministerial message, and the | . Adams | Air De Ballet i Anna Formica Polacca Brillante Elizabeth Tarrant Songs for soprano— Ombra Mai Fu .. I Know a Lovely Garden— ... D'Hardelot Josephine Tommasoni Hunting Song . Mendelssohn Oscar Anderson Minuet, Op. 14, No. 1 .. Paderewski Frances Shurberg | Waltz in A Flat, Op. 39, No. 15— Brahms . Nevin | | | Barchetta, Op. 21 ..... Julla Hoffman Allegro Con Brio .. Mabel Steiner Waltz In A Flat Major, Op. 42— .. Chopin Lilllan (‘n!nle Tarantelle, Op. 85, No. 2 Sara <hurberg Barcarolle, Op. 30, No. 1— Rubinstein MacDowell . Heller | | Shadow Dance, Op. 39 Lillian Suzio | Impromptu, Op. 90 . Mildred Keimowitz | Anitra's Dance .... . Grieg Sara and Frances Shurberg Schubert | OPENS NEW MUSEUM Fogg Building At Harvard University Ofticially Opened Today. Cambridge, Mass., June 20 (®— | | Harvard university opens today fits $2,000,000 new Fogg art museum with a scheduled address by Presi- | dent A. Lawrence Lowell. The building, unlike the old Fogg, | which it replaces, is located just out | side the yard. Experts have pro- ! I nounced it one of the finest of such ' institutions in the country. | The exterior is done in the Georg- | ian style while the interior is built about a large central ratio. Special art works from the collections of J. Pierpont Morgan and Andrew Mellon are temporarily on display, in addi- tion to the museum’s own treasures. The older museum, familiar to sev- eral generations of Harvard has been turned to other uses. men, | ONE CENT A FILL Boston Library to Charge Peoplc Filling Fountain Pens. Boston, June 20 (A—Fountain pen filling fans now have only the post |office left, The public library has posted notice that hereafter ink will be sold at a cent a fill. Officials declared in explanation of the new rule that students had been found to bring as many as a half dozen pens |to dip into public inkwells at the desks and in the reading rooms while |the building was being frequented by increasing numbers of persons { who made no pretense at reading at jall | Sundays will be on a strictly “bring your own,” basis. There will be no ink sold on that day. Library | attendants said the city did not ex- pect to make money by the new ar- | rangement, 4 | | PLAN BIG SUGAR MILL Manila, June 20 P—The Compan- ia Tabacalera, of which the King | this world." | that they may all call upon the name The Deys live in an ad- | understood that he would make an of Spain is one of the stockholders, effort to be here in time for the hagannounced plans for building the | commencement exercises this after- | largest sugar mill in the Philippines. noon. The mill, which will be in the '1'1\« invocation was delivered by | Tarlac pro ince, will have an ulti- their 17th| standing in front of his | . Willlam F. nging by the boys and girls'| | choruses and aselections by the | school orchestra. Rev. Samuel R. | Colladay, dean of | Cathedral gave the closing prayer nd invocation.. | The baccalaureate service was held Sunday afternoon at the home nd Rev. Francis B. Whitcomb, | rector of Christ church, Watertown, delivered the baccalaureate sermon. The school choruses rendered sev- | eral pleasing selections. Mary Cof- fey, Anna Jordine and Walter Hy- hder sang solos. The program was Ly the singing of the school The Bells of Our Newington.” Leigh, superin- home, presented The good citl- song, | Miss Constance {tendent at the prizes for the year. zenship prizes were awarded to | Voronica Ryan and John Batazzl. |H~r'h1 Mattis, Josephine Casarino {and Ralph Johnson won the “Help- | ful Prize These prizes are an- nually awarded to children at the Homa e RoG Hava shown] themaslvas to be most helpful outside the school work. Nineteen boys and girls won prizes for scholarship, deportment, and at- tention to duties. They are John il Miano, Mary Seleman, acaro, Leopold Kich, John Frank Sakowitz, Antion- Agnes Biertz, Julia McGullion, Nattie Gertrude ank kowitz Lilllan Joseph Stepwien, oche, Walter McKuch, | Davey, Dorothy Lindquis uel Pardo The class hanquet will take place at 6 o'clock and music will be fur- nished by William B. chestra, the services of which were given to the home by Mr. Tasillo. FEdward Milligan. president of the | Phoenix Tnsurance Co., will speak. | Headmaster George R. H. Nicholson of Kingswood school, West Hartford, and Man- Odell and there was | Christ Church | Florence | Tasillo’s or- | ;mate capacity of 5,000 metric tons i daily. A contract has been signed | with a St. Louis, Mo., company for £2,000,000 worth of machinery. OT oats and milk” is the dietetic urge of the day. It's the “balanced ration” of pro- tein, nrbohydraus and vitamines— plus the “bulk” to make laxatives less often needed — that world's authorities are advising. Now you cook it in 2; to 5 minutes. That's faster than plain toast. No kitchen muss or bother. Why go on, then, with less nour- | ishing breakfasts? Today get Quick | Quaker .. . food that stands by you | through the morning. Your grocer has Quick Quaker— alto Quaker Oats as you have always | known them, |Quick Quaker | | over-flooded with water, perished.’ ! This, of course, does not refer to the | literal carth, for we still live upon the same planct. It means that the | order of things which existed before | the flood ceased when the deluge came. We have the assurance in the book of Ecclesiastes that the carth abides forever and in the 45 chapter of Tsaiah, verse 18, we are informed that God did not create the earth in vain, but that he formed it to be inhabited. It is therefore clear that the passing away of a world does not mean the destruction of the carth. So when we read in Peter’s letter that the heavens and the earth which unto fire against the day of judg- | ment, we are prepared to look for ! an interpretation in harmony with the Scriptures, which plainly tell us that the earth is not to be| destroyed. “As the expression to the social order in so the term ‘heavens’ to a controlling spiritual organiza- tion under the super-control of the | master-mind Satan. It is for this reason that he is called ‘the god of But what does Peter; mean when he refers to a destruc- tive fire? Does this mean that God | intends to wipe out the human fam- | ily by fire, as the flood destroyed it ai the end of the first world? No, indeed, for God promised that he would not again destroy every living ! thing as at that time. What then does it mean? Zephaniah 3:8,9, | clarifies the matter. We there read: ‘Wait ye upon me, saith the Lord, until the day that I rise up to the prey; for my determination 1s to zather the nations, that I may as- semble the kingdoms, to pour upon them mine indignation . . . for all the earth shall be devoured with the ! fire of my jealousy. For then will I | turn to the people a pure message, ‘earth’ refers ! of the Lord, to serve him with one consent.” It will be seen from this passage that after the fire has done its purifying work, the people re- main and are given the message of truth which leads to a harmonious worship of God. The fire simply refers to a period of trouble and dis- tress through which the world passes before the introduction of the new order of things, the beginning of the new world in which right will rule. This is what Peter tells us a180: ‘We, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new carth, wherein dwelleth righteous- nes: “Because of blindness man s skeptical of the promises set forth in the Word of God, that the Kingdom, for which Christians have long prayed, s to be cstablished and now i3 beilng established. We have abundant proof that the old order of things is giving way to a new ar- rangement. The 24th chapter of Matthew gives us a remarkable prophecy relating to our day. The disciples of Jesus had asked him as to what would be the proof of his second presence, and of the passing away of the old order and the estab- lishment of the new. We find his reply s being fulfilled in detall at Keep Your Face Young Looking WWhen the pores are sluggish and the skin dry and parched, the face Lecomes worn and haggard. To remove the dis- colored skin and cleanso the pores, use pure mercolized wax. Obtain an ounce at any drug store or beauty counter, and use as direoted. The wax absorbs the aged, blotchy, solled skin, peeling it off a little at a time, untll freckles, tan, blackheads and all have disappeared. The underneath skin blossoms forth, clear, fresh and velvety and the facs looks more girlish. Merco- lized wax brings out the hidden beauty. One of New Britain’s old- est and most reliable jewelers offers a complete stock of diamond engage- ment rings and jewelry on the Budget Plan of payment. All sales strict- ly confidential. Address Box 32-S., N. B. Herald. DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Or. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN are now reserved ; ' { not the present time. Therefore bring are at hand; and soon all the | sorrows of earth will be only a| memory. ] | HUGH WILSON IN IHPORTANT POST i Selected as Secretary General fo| Arms Limitation Conference Geneva, June 20 (—The convo- cation by the United States of the three-power naval conference at Ge- neva and, as it was afterwards ar- ranged, on the property of the League of Nations, of which the| is not a member, | opended delicate questions touching | the organization of the conference. Great Britain and Japan as mem- | bers of the League formally re-| quested facilitics for the conference, and Sir Erik Drummond, secretary general of the League promptly of- | fered all facilities that the conferees | thought they would need. As this was a special conference | limited to three powers, it was fi- | nally decided by the three nations to | select a secretary general who would | be a citizen of one of their countries. The choice soon fell upon Hugh R. American minister to Switzerland | only a month before the calling of the conference. | Since 1924, Wilson had been chief | of the division of current informa- tion at the State Department in Washington, where he was in daily What I Have Learned in 47 Years Practice 1 watched the results of constipa-| tion for 47 years, from the time 1! | began the practice of medicine back [in 1875, and though from time to time the medical profession makes some wonderfuly interesting experi- ments and tests, the fundamentals of causes and relief in this common ailment are unchanged. No matter how careful people are of their health, diet and exercise, constipation will occur from time to time regardless of how much one tries to avoid it. Of next import- ance, then, is how to treat it when | it comes. I belicve in getting as close to nature as possible, hence my remedy for constipation, known | as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, is a mild vegetable compound. It can| not harm the most dellcate system | and is not a habit forming prepara- tion. Syrup Pepsin is pleasant-tast- | ing, and youngsters love it. It does| gripe. Thoisands of mothers | have written me to that effect. | Recently there has been a mnew | wave of drastic physics. Calomel, a | mercurial that salivates and loosens | teeth, has been revived: salts which | draw vital fluids from the body and | thin the blood, causing rheumatic | aches and pains; coal tar (phen-| olphthalein) disguised in gum or| candy form, that poisons and irri- | tates the tissue of the stomach, in-| testine and bowel, causing skin | eruptions. In a practice of 47 years| I never saw any reason for their! use when a medicine like Syrup| Pepsin will empty the bowels just as promptly, more cleanly and gent- | without griping and damage to the system. Keep free from constipation! It NEW BRITAIN’S BUSIEST DEPARTMENT Alarm Clocks 95¢ C W 1||| |IE|||im } I Quick Servnce in Our While-You- iring. W. are selling theso Lurge Skull Temple Spectacles Wait Repai the | blessings which the new order will | jot Yale, and sometim the scores of newspapers corres- pondents. Wilson was born at Evans- ton, Illinois, in 1885, is & graduate took post-graduate work at Paris and began his career in business life at Chicago. His diplo- matic life was inaugurated by serv- ing as private secretary to the Amer- ican Minister in Portugal. Then he became secretary successively at Guatamala, Buenos Aires, Berlin, Vienna, Berne and Tokyo. In Japan he was in close touch with the lead- | ing Japanese of the day, including Admiral Baron Saito, who is the | chief Japanese delegate to the con- g { ference which opened today. POST BAND WINS PRIZE New Britain Legion Musical Organi- zation Awarded Trophy at Fire- men’s Parade in Terryville. Eddy-Glover Post, American Le- | gion band, was adjudged the best musical organization in line at the annual gathering of firc departments under the auspices of Terryvlile de- partment Saturday afternoon, for this distinction, was presented with a silver loving cup. The local | band was one of several in line and the applause from about 15,000 spectators was one of the factors in determining the victor. Eddy-Glover post band led a di- vision consisting of Tunxis Fire De- partment of Unionville, East Hart- ford, Veterans of Volunteer Fire De- partments of Hartford, Bristol nnd Wethersfield. The cup today was placed in the ! trophy case of the post home on Washington street where three other prizes had previously been placed. robs your strength, hardens your ar- teries and brings on premature old age. Do not let a day go by with- out a howel movement. Do not sit and hope, but go to a druggist and get one of the generous bottles of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Take' a teaspoonful that night and by morning you will feel like a different | person. The cost is only about a| cent a dose. Use Syrup Pepsin for| yourself and members of the fam- ily in constipation, biliousness, sour and crampy stomach, bad breath, no appetite, headaches, and to break up fevers and colds. Always have a bottle in the house, and observe these three rules of health: Keep the head cool, the feet warm, the bowels open. WATCH REPAIRING and $25 n.") $12, 815 Open an $5.00 no matter what the other fellow charges. A guaranteed by Michaels, Inc, whether $5, $6, §5, $12, $20 or $25. We have up-to-dato facllities and employ a registered optometrist who s competent to make careful examination of your eyes, Wwhen even the most complicated glasses are required. Michaels 354 MAIN ST. S Protect Your Furniture From Dust 3 PIECES, SET In Cretonnes in the New- Made to Order With Our Own Ma- terials, Fa Est FASHION DRAPERY SHOPPE 60 MAPLE AVE. Phonc 8-1561 or Write for Samples and Estimate. DISTANCE LIP COVERS SALE Beautify Your Home. Large Sclection olsl 7_98 est Patterns. All ‘orders Guaranteed. ctory to You. Get Cur FREE timate. HARTFORD NO OBJECT EVERYBODY’LL BE LOOKING AT YOU on the Fourth; be sure that you are look- ing your best in clean, well-pressed clothes. Send vour thin, the last minute ru gs right away and avoid sh. nightly touch w !I‘l' H. L. MILLS 336 MAIN ST. At The “Handy Hardware” Store ] | t |8 and | § INSECTICIDES Pyrox Black Leaf 40 Arsenate of Lead Paris Green Fly-0-San. For her day everything must be chosen with greatest care. Let us assist you in the selection of the rings she will approve and cherish forever. Genuine Traub Orange Blossom Rings are fea- tured by us. It will be a pleasure to show them to you. M. C. LeWitt Jeweler & Diamond Dealer Up 1 Flight 209 Main St._ @om mn 330ranis Blosso LEHIGH TALKS that lasts long, that burns completely, trat always renders fll value, i mighty good coal. Our coal 18 the kind we have de- scribed. Coal Lasting Coal Gives Lasting Satisfaction STANLEY SVEA GRAIN & COAL COMPANY Cor. Stanley and Dwight Sts, Fel. 419. Menus & Birnbaum, Props KODAKS AND SUPPLIES The great outdoors calls you. Sce our important line of new Kodaks. All reasonably priced Start taking pictures now. 24 Hour Film Service. JOHN 4. McBRIARTY rmacist Cor. Chmh and Stanley streets Thone 1384, OrientalRugs Complete line of Persian and Chinese Makes, all sizes. Also Repairing and Cleaning. Excel- lent service and perfect satise faction guaranteed. We Call for and Dellver. S. V. Sevadjian 162 Glen Street Tel. 1190 ENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch 353 Main St. X-Ray Pyorrhea Trcatments