New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 11, 1927, Page 11

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‘msslnnuwm 0N SPORTS GOMEBACK Says Some Athletes Turn the “Trik, Others “Return™ Jeveland, Ohio, July 10 (UP)— - There are “come-backs” and ‘“re- turn trips” as I see the situation In Sports. For example, Jack Demp- ‘!?)"! attempt to regain -his lost lau- rels is a real honest-to-goodness “come back.” Except for his fight . ‘with Tunney he has virtually been out of competition for several years ind lived a life which softened him hh\!l(‘ally and mentally. Thé loss of WilHam Tilden, Helen Wills and Bolby Jonese of their championship-crowns, for one season or another, were the inevitable de- feats and breaks which come to any one engaged regularly in competi- tions, eombined with the pursuit of husiness and pleasure. But, there I8 . question of making a return trip and ‘they have not journeyed far from championship honors. Helen Wills has already returned zreatly re‘reshed and better for her brief vacation. Big Bill and Bobby Jones were just “out of the city a - few days,” but will be on hand for bustness “Mofday morning.” Bobby has an important business sngagement the next few days and from all reports is primed for the issue. He is the favorite of all odds “vto retain the British open golf cham- pionship, Willlam Tilden's loss of the na- tional championship last year at Forest Hills and his faflure to an- nex the French and Wimbledon championships does not mean that Willlam Tilden is a has-been trying “to come bock. The analysls of the ‘thrée matches lost by Tilden in the réecent championship events, showed ithem to be so closely contested they | were practically anybody’s match. The deciding set of the Tilden-La- :Toste match in the French champ- ! . jonship, which was a five set affair, ‘found Tildén leading the advantage Aime an® 40-15 on his' own service. 7TFilden poised - himself to put over . one. of his, cannon_ball services and .end the match, as he so often has| ymaniiged to do. LaCoste returned sthe flrst attempt and the score was even, rvice ace and the match, ! next service came like a shot out of a rifle.-but Henri Cochet, who on the line called the ball a fault. LaCoste heaved a sigh of relief, for ¢ the ball had beaten him all the wa Y Tt 1 ust have been a very close thing +for the: gallory thought.the match “was Tilden's. People.began to pick up_their coats and were saying, “La :Costé has but up a good fight, but ; n-m\ the decision called against Til4{veqrs in the ring Wills, the experts ' knowledge sden the play. was resumed. The tide {turned and LaCoste, all pepped up éover the piece of luck, won the next ‘two ‘games and the French champ- ‘ionstr,) from a tired and depressed « Tilden. -t W @ miss is as good as fmakes thes gap Wid, _the matc s close, yet as they s a mile and time The details af s forgotte defeat at Wimblgdon by | Henri Cochet, was again one of those Ateattons@sking'matches; when you LAl but have the. prize tucked.in the Jpocket, and_something happens to KRateh it trom you. Tilden's fédd- of v sets @nd 5-1 in-the third, jnsurmountable, but little Henri, Co- Lehet climbed up stroke by stroke and {plucked victory from defeat. You see Tild Wi not white- ashed In the hampionship and $ihat is tore Tilden scored victori fover both LaCoste and Cochet dur- ing his recent trip abroad. His vie- 4tory over LaSoste was in the team Ymatch and his straight set victory jover Coéhél “wa§ in the semi-finals fof the Jx se neh championship. Tilden has not gone off in his ten- nis, as much as the Frenchmen have come up. They have cut down the margin of supcriorit by intelligent | study ‘of Tilden's game and adapta- tion of their strokes to cope with his ast return. Also they “enough to realize Tilden has not {much stamina as he had three {ago. The Tilden-LaCoste {French championship lasted Jiours and twenty five minute e deliberacly slowed up his game | ]A th nd came on the court with the idca of keepiig the ball in play and ma ing Tilden run miles. That wa !Y'\(mg the famous Suzanne Li YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $300 Privately and upon_terms Ahat are casy to meet. No indorsers, no embarrassing nvestigations. We hand you the Money In 24 Hours We operate under the super- vislon of the State and our fce is offered to you on a p tected basis. Call, Write or THE MUTUAL SYSTEM 81 West Main St. Room 112 Professional Bldg. Opposite Capitol Theater Telephone 4930 i SRS e i Fine Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing. We<dirg Ring Shop 9 ARCH STREET Tilden still had a chance for | His | was | jo1d, ned | ¢ match in the | and Tilden's own tactics of exhaust- ! ing their opponents. Tilden was equally determined to keep LaCoste chasing, so there were abnormally long rallies for men's tennis. One r¢ .-t said that in some rallies the ball passed fifty times over: the net before the point was decided. It is the wearing down which ¥ am afraid will finally get Tilden. On strokes and varicty of strokes, none of these Frenchmen can touch Tilden yet, but they are all youn‘er men. HERE AND THERE IN SPORTS WORLD 1 Two Important Gomeback Fights ! Scheduled peculiar twist of sports fortune |that within elght days, this week and next, the ring will witness conmeback fights by the two who less than a year ago stood around the heavyweight peak, one the champion and the other con- sidered a leading ‘“menace,” even it side-tracked. son of a seventh son to have had mer of 1926 that these two, Dempsey and-Harry Wills, would fall from their positions within a fortnight of each other, as they did, and in another twelfth month be striving to get back into the picture, each trying to sidestep the decline that comes with age. Within a few days after Ge Tunney had dethroned the man hc had trailed in a title hunt for f years, Harry whipped by Jack Sharkey. Making his first appearance in the !since that October night, the gia {negro battles the Bounding Bo | Paulino Uzcudun, here this We {nesday. On Thursday of the follow |ing week the same Sharkey rupset Wills will attempt to halt th comeback .of Dempsey. Fate seems to have cast the |vear-old Sharkey for the role of “Jack the Giant Killer” though ithere seems substantial reason to Ibelieve he will find the task of conquering the former champion more difficult to accomplish than {the job of vanquishing ‘Wills last tall. There is this decided difterence {however, in-the present outlook for | Demtpsey and Wills. The big negro. {aven should he defeat- fhe younger. {more agile and stronger Spaniard, |has: no prospect of coming back jinto title consideration. After 17 ' agree, has “put his future behind him.” Dempsey. on the other hand. has return championship fight with Tunney in- prospect if he can def |Time, recover the accuracy of his devastating attack and whip the youthful Sharke The monopoly of heavyweights on | the fistic limelight this year has put lits usual jinx on the ambitions of | the smaller fellows to figure in title bouts, or, rather, it has dampened the enthusiasm of promoters for championship fights which would be obscured by the focus of interest nd attentions on Dempsey, Tunney, ct al. | In lthe I tle the | scetor only Dundec has enlivened the ai- nd it was far from a finan- en the proposed \-McTigue light heavyweizht ordinarily an outdoor natural,” has failed to arouse expected interest. It has heen post- | poned a month until August 11 A similar situation existed in 1923 | the last hig “boom v among the ights, when Luls Firpo was making his spectacular advance to a fight with Dempsey, That year, | promoters staged sich I'zagements among the little fellows s the Criqui-Kilbane, Dundee-Cri- qui, Villa-Wilde, Greb-Wilson and {sccond Leonard-Tendier bouts, buf rly all. suffered big losses. Tn four title houts in Highter classes at the ! promoters lost more than $100,000, Lut Tex Rickard stepped the Tirpo-Dempsey climax the same arena to draw approsimately $1,200,000 from a capacity crowd of §5,000. metropol smalle nea | the in MISS SLEATH BETROTHED The engagement of s Li | Sleath, daughter of Mr. and M | James Sleath of South Burritt strect, to Wooster Hitchcock, son of Mr and Mrs. Harry Hitchcock of Haven, announced Satur afternoon at a tea tendered by Mr Harold Johnson of Springfield at the bome of her mother, Mrs. B. W. | Lewis of Harrison . No date has been set for the wedding. About 15 young women were present. Mrs. Sleath and Mrs. Hitchcock poured, assisted by Miss Marjoriz Sleath and Mrs. Blakeslee. The table decord tions were done in pink and white. At vounger set of this city. member of the Alpha Alpha sorority Mr. Hitcheock is associated with the | dletown. STAG TAR DIES Gregory Kelley Was in “The Butter and g Man.” New York, July 11 (P—Gregory whose sudden fillness in ebruary ended the na Igg Man," star, died late Pittsburgh st tour of “The Butter of which he was the pital. He was accounted one of the best known juvenile American stage. His |Gordon, s starring Children.!’ Among Kelly's succ part “in Tarkington; Itirst Year. The young actor's death ended a struggle of several heart discase. After a sofourn in the Maine woods, Kelly returned to |Xew York and had been a patient at Harbor sanitarium four months when he died. widow, Ruth in “Saturday’s Bootn “Clarence” and “The New York, July 11 (® — It is a| men | It would have taken the seventh | the boldness to predict in the sum- | Jack | * [body. Wills was decisively | ue, ! that | -Latzo welterwelght bat- | the | notable en- | financial | Polo Grounds, | in with | Sleath is well known among the | She 18 & | Russell Manufacturing Co. of Mid- | Saturday night in a New York hos- | actors on the ! months against | “SINGING VIKINGS” STIR AUDIENCE T0 ENTHUSIASM National Chorus of Sweden Thrills HOLD JANITOR IN DOUBLE KILLING Suspect Views Dismembered Bodies But Claims Innocence | New York, July 11 (P—A trail | that started Saturday with the find- |ing in Battery park of dismembered | parts of a woman's legs had led to- day to a double murder mystery and the arrest of a man suspect. Bit by bit, through Saturday and Sunday, additional parts of the tor- |50 of the slain woman came to light, "h‘—‘ trail finally leading to a Brook d them through their paces with | Iyn house whe the dismembered | (e SKill of the symphoay conductor | body of another woman was found. |} e AT OMIR BARE. AR that The victims of the double murder | meticnlous rezard for the niceties of | were identitied by police as Miss |\t ysually associated wiih a highly | Sarah Elizabeth Brownell, 60 Year |\ iiined symphony orchestra. The old former seamstress of Glovers sult was a revelation of the ville, N. Y., and Mrs. Alfred Bennett, | e AR ::‘,|'}\‘1flv;||(x(v’;x:\ iceman and mother of | St B childrer A BEC, <5 Police were holding on a homicide ,”\’;1' "\’\"‘“‘"“,y'_(fr“""‘,"‘-. "“0"']"‘ ne | Brownell lived. He stoutly prote rly useless 10 add that both were | his fnnocence after 12 hou | | questioning. The police theory sung in that Miss Brownell was slain repre- robbery and Mrs. Bennett nificent | when she chanced to surprise litera- | murderer at work. t Still Another While police were murder of the two women, mystery cropped up in a dark in the lower east side whe | plumber, sent a rep.ir a water in a tenement in Willett strect, {upon two bundles containing the dis- !membered portions < of a man Police believe the victim had heen dead several months. Identifi- cations were not established. Police were starting a systematic | search of all sewer inlets when early | i vesterday a boy, walking in the yard | Luther M lof St. Augustine’s Roman Catholic church, noticed a bundle wrapped in | a plece of blanket. | It contained a portion of the lower part of a woman's torso. Three hours | later a woman's left shoulder and arm, the ring finger severcd, was |found in a package behind a movie theater in Brooklyn. i Wife Reported Missing Meanwhile, police had received a [report from Alfred Bennett that his !wife was missing. The Bennetts oc- 'cupy a house on Lincoln place, di- {rectly in the rear of 2§ Prospect place, which the Bennetts sold to | | Miss Brownell on May 14 | A son, John, 19, recalled last time ‘he saw his mo |Saturday when he entered the cellar |of the Prospect place house to in- | vestigate a water leak of which Mi Brownell had complained. The po- lice then went to the other hous: There they found Lee. He denic of the whercabouts of cither woman, but detectives enter led the half-flooded cellar and dis- | covered further human fragments in I three ash cans. Lee wrrested. | To the position of Another Suspect | district No. 10, left vacant by 1lso had under arrest lappointment of Mr. Keith, the witness Christian Jensen, | oner has appointed James wio roomed with Lee at the Iros- r, who since 1924 has heen ¢ pect place house. Both men werd supervisor at Putnam. |compelled to view the reconstrneted | -~ bhodies of the women, but steadfastly | denied any knowledge of the erime. Otto Neilson, a friend of the two men, was held for guestioning. Police Inspector Sullivan quoted Fred Schmidt, a witness who lives opposite the murder house, as say ing he saw Lee leave the building ' |carly vesterday morning carryir I pare returning twenty nin rest [later and again departing with i other parcel. The theater and church 119" {vard where the packages were found | lare only a few blocks removed from the Prospect place house. Miss Brownell was last reported scen July s believed she met her death | New Britain Folks With Fasci- nating Program. “the The “De N the national chorus of ing Vikings, or sing- | Sweden, an mudicnce in T, fA, B. hall Saturday aft> high pitch of enthusiasm. The male " singer tour of Americ finish and fine »dmiration of the audienz nigh boundless. l',mll Carelius, the dircetor, ear- | insprred oon to 50 odd ) a . sang with such tone volume that the was well |o 15 | i Th or Thes | cminently The ot capable was ' for killed the selections all Swedish and the composers sented were from the n Leritage Swedish choral ire. were | of ystery working on th ther & [ leak came As is customary in Swe horal cietics, the men earried th upon the s sang i g them | amid a were { tumult applause these 1ved at t TREE WARDEN NEW OFFICE IN STATE HIGHWAY DEPT. Keith of Putnam Chosen of andience. To Beautify Roadsides in Connecticut July 11—State Highway John A, Macdonald| mnounced the creation with m’ epartment of the office of tr en, the duties of which will be it the provision of chaptor | a of 1927 which ay commissioner all trees, shrubbery ts growing within state highways. | vy power | tra when | h jurisdiction over and flowering p limits of the new will jot eliminating, cuttin planting of trees and for highway convenience, or the ind ubs The office that the was on necessary co public beautification pur Commissioner nounced the appointment office Luther M. Keith of Putnam, 1923 has been supervisos of highway distriet No, 10 which comprises practically all of Windham county oses, Macdonald also 4 to this nev ot who of L since of the com- W, supervisor I Polic as matertal j he nt ARRESTED AS SPY, TWiesh: G July {UP)—A woman believed (o be Ge n n to hive consort W ers of the Reichswehr sted here charged with Incrimina ing papers beza found on ar- in to who is knoy ol with offi wing a spy. alleged to have The al statement of her did not indicate th behalt s stnpo acting. her. nation 1 is heen LEHIGH SHOOT |Coast Guards R ced to Do Their Duty, Though Unpleasant. Buffalo, N. Y., July 11 (® — U. coast guardsmen in order to comply in the strictest { their ideas of duty, last sbliged to shoot at three fonly a few minutes before cued them from the N he guardsmen ha €0-foot motorboat carrying s of contraband ale across the fiver from Canada to the United States. Just as the revenue boat had | aken the other craft it hecame imbedded in weeds in is | nown the Black chan- | nel and called upon captive | boat for The crew of the ale runner held a short conference and acceded to jthe request extricating the govern- ‘ment boat by towing it to the shore. Once on shore, however, the pris- ners made a dash for libery in the darkness. The coast guardsmen opened fire at the fugitives but the atter escaped. that 1t lasts burns tkat renders night we t men who completely, value, v good coal Our coal is the we have de- scribed. Coal tistaction Lasting sting & what °s Rock the as STANLEY SVEA GRAIN & COAL COMPANY Cor. Stanley and Dwight Sts. Iel, 419, Menus & Birnbaum, 5 ai a Borrow Economically THE FIDELITY INDUSTRIAL supervision of the State Banking Department, is author- ized to make loans of ,000, at the legal interest rate of 6 per cent per annum, plus a service charge of $1 for every $50 borrowed. BANK under the Loans are made to persons of good character and reputation who require money to liquidate accumulated debts, pay taxes, mortgages, insurance premiums or other necessities. The Fidelity Industrial Bank was not organized to encourage the careless borrowing of money, but to meet economically the actual needs that may aris THE FIDELITY INDUSTRIAL BANK 140 Main Street J | morning on his hors +our white i y | of the pony 11 | 1s | DAYS OF OLD ARE REVIVED IN WEST Pony Express Part of Coolidge's Entertainment ipid City, 8. D., July 11 (UP)— The Pany Express rode again today for P'resident Coolidge. Reviving the past, when pony rid- ers carried mail from Omaha to the Pacific coast, Butch Bell started from Cheyenne, Wyoming, this ‘Frank Em- erson” to bring to the president an invitation to go to the frontier days celebration or visit Wyoming at any convenient time. Twenty: along th invitation are due | white at Governor ven riders were lined up 300 mile trail to carry the to the president. They to arrive at the summer 1:30 p. m. tomorrow Frank Emerson of Lyo- ming delivered the message to the rider asking the president | 1o come to any part of the state in- cluding what Emerson called the ‘dude” ich country at Yellow- stone park. “Wyoming believe state will be of to both youfself and Emerson wrote. © ‘We want to our president better and we nt you to know Wyoming better.” The route of the nmew pony ex- lies through tortuous moun-, pas and will require (mxel-\ throughout the night. The sec- v man in the pony chain is Francis 1. Warren, grandson of the | senator from Wyoming. Horses in the chain bear names of famous | characters including Emerson, W Teddy Roosevelt, Senators Nor- s and Howell, local congresmen nd senators. The last horse will Coolidge” and Dakota Clyde winner of wild horse race at Belle | Fourche round up, will ride it the final three miles from the forestry service to game lodge. Jones is| keeper of horses at summer white hous: A special party of Wyoming citi- | zens headed by Imerson are expect- | ed to come up in automobiles ahead | to welcome them The party will lunch with President and Mrs. Coolidge. Warren was unable to attend the celebration hecause of illness of M 1 in Washington . Coolidze has indicated the invitation and has atement that he will fro mthe summer points from the same day. first s that a visit to mutual advan- g our’ peo- pl | know be “Calvin | Jones, the at the lodge. he will au- 80 | white which he further house than an return VANDERBILT NOW - T0 ASK DIVORCE, | “Mismated”, Wealthy Reporter ' Says, En Route to Reno | New York, 11 (P | Vanderbilt and son of nelius Vand July Jr., Geng rhilt, “ornelius newspaper writer U and Mrs, Cor- has gone to Reno, | i l ‘| derbilt, | tinction. | pole on the | solid | Beach near |the blaze. {reported ti | Walter Piorkowski to seek a divorce from Mrs. Rachell Littleton Vanderbilt, from whom he has been separated the last two years. Mr. Vanderbilt, prior to his de- parture, declared he was forced to take this action because his wife would not sue him. “I have nothing against my wife,"” he said, “and there is no other man or woman in the case. We were just mismated.” The marriage of Cornelius Van- fourth of that name, Miss Littleton, a half sister of Mar- tin W. Littleton, Jr., prominent New ALA. HAS THREE MORE FLOGGINGS Two Boys, One Woman Lashed by Masked Men | | Pt 1 on and | | Birmingham. Ala., July 11 GP—| Coincident with the announcement York lawyer, was one of the bril| from Montgomery that a bill would liant society event§ of 1920, My, | D¢ introduced in the state legislature | Vanderbilt, at the time, was employ- | °" Tuesday to ban wearing of masks ed as a reporter on a New York |11 the state of Alabama for other newspaper and continued writing | than legitimate amusement purposes for his paper while on a honeymoon | h¢ Birmingham Age Herald today taiy Bt e ekt revealed another case of flogging | masked and robed men, the third i Difficulties first developed wWhen he | Alahama within two weeks, It w started a chain of tabloid newspa- at these floggings that the proposed pers in several cities against the ex-| bill was aimed pressed wishes of his parents. This| ppo Ave Herald quote finally led to an estrangement and ypurchison, 17, of Bessmer, Aln, his wife, siding with his parents saying that on the night of June made her home with them. His 1o was foreibly taken from an auto- | newspaper venture falled last vear ppile in which he and another | when his father withdrew his finan-|vouth were riding with two cial support “strange” girls, and was severely | Mr. Vanderbilt said his f: ily is | whipped by five men who wore opposed to a divorce, but “sanctions | hoods and masks. a separation if we cannot get along | together. “This,” he observed, “is a rather strange way to look things in these modern times when two peo- ple who cannot get along together usually find it more amicable to dissolve the marriage bond and at- tempt to make their lives over.” s Eston | were | Murchison, taken home, the masked men, ‘ nd Murchison xpressed the belief t they had been maneuvered into his company so that there might be | onie excuse” for whipping him. He kneyw of no other reason and stated that Ernest Smitterton, 18, | panion, was not molested son did not attempt to identify men, Another Whipping Case | State law officers have arrived in | Florence, Colbert county, to investi- | zate the whipping last week of Mr Rertha A. Slay, 28, by eight men, likewi: masked and also w\x;n'ing‘ dis. | ot Mrs. Slay said the men en- | | tered her home. tied her husband { and sister to their beds and took her into the back yard where an effort was made to force her 0 confess aid by he girls, his com- | Murchi- the | b‘hlp\ueck Kelly Starts Out for Annther Record | Buffalo, July 11 (UP)— flagpole sitter ¢ wordinary, at 10 o'clock this morn- ng had completed 22 hours of his new attempt to attain further Kelly noon started his new sitting at sterday. Perched atop tl Andrews’ building, Kelly | o5 ma%e o for ‘K"p‘?‘j,“’ stay there se\an 4avs 8ev-| “Rofusing, she was repeatedly | | nights, and seven minutes. He s | qqhoq with “something that felt | [atless and coatless. {like the fan belt of an automobile. Xelly was not disturhed by re-nyie {38 R B OT o8 AL OmEb o porie trom Denver At ST | e the fogsing because of reat ord. “He used a back-rest and ate :‘“‘L,“;_ML Mool e fanchin iy foods, which I den't,” said| An Oneonta, in a special session lot Blount county circuit court a | grand jury was to be drawn to in- \f‘ll[ the flogging last Wednes- day of Jeft Calloway, 10 year old | orphan of Onconta. Men wearing masks and robes also figured in this flogging. In none of the flogging cases have sts been made thus far. The measure proposing to abolish opera- Kelly. S BURNED July 11 (® —| Two cottags were destroved last night in a fire that for a tim threatened to wipe out the entire summer colony at White Horse | heve. Plymouth fireme were hampered by a lack of water | and resorted to chemicals to fight | tion of masked men in Alabama | At one time five cottages | Would make it a misdemeanor for were ablaze |anvone to appear on the streets or Thomas Shaw, ofie of the fire- highw of Alabama disguised men, was overcome while on the WhoIly in part by a mask. For mere 100 of a cottage and was founa | Violation of the proposed law, a| wandering in a dazed condition in|PENAlty of not less than $100 and not AN I more than one year at hard labor g | would be required. 1f in the act of | violating the anti-mask law, the of- fender committed a criminal act, the oeffnse would he considered a felony, punishable by not less than five years nor more than 20 y imprisonment in the Alabama penitentiary. TWO COTTAC Plymouth, Mass. ON POLICE BLOTTER. Mrs. Henry Winderlin of 91 Smal- |iey street reported yesterJay that the meter at her hom~ had been broken open and the money taken Manuel Feranda of 31 i.ilac street at his wife left him a few | weeks ago and has not returned. | Office . found an tomobile on Sexton stre::, near La- le, which had been 1eported by ! of 115 Gold| street stolen on Lake street, ate NEWINGTON NEWS rally will | e Newing- ) The annual cradle roll be held on the lawn of Itle ton Center chureh op. Thi ernoon at 2:30. Al five years old are invii with! mothers. 3 The Sunday schoel committee of he Newington Congregational churv.‘h has décided To hold a dafly vacation school the ‘first two weg] in August at the parish beuse. Mildred Ericson will have charge of {the primary department and Mitss | Doris Francis of the 1unl~.n } The annual picnic of the \uflua ton Congregational church Sunday chool will be held at Crystal Lake on July 23. The trip will be mad by special trolley. Donald Proudman lelt Saturday for Lake Bromosen, Castleton, Ver- mont, where e will spaad his va- cation. Property tax collections for the |1m'nh of June amounted to $§ll,. . which is a slight decrease the corresponding month in when the collection; were $11,« George Barton returnel teday te Detroit after a brief .visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Barton of Elm Hill. Mrs. B. Proudman will attend a meeting of the executive board of the Connecticut State Federption of Women's clubs jn New Havem, to- morrow. Miss Emily Louise Plume ley, president of the State -Federa tion, and Mrs. Elmore Evans, gene «ral federation director, will enter- tain the members of the board at luncheon, Gertrude M. Fieber 9f Frederick g Maple Hill, and Gertrude y 1wood, formerly of New= on, returned last svening from v View, Milford, where they spent ir vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Johnston of Frederick street, Maple Hill, will attend the funeral of Rev. Charles E, ‘wing In New Haven today. MY, ing, who was an uncle of Mrs, Johnston, was killed in an automo- bile accident near Brauford last Thursday. Baby’s Rash May Lead to Something Worse Don’t use powder on your baby, When the diaper makes the buttocks |sore and inflamed, powder only 4n- creases the trouble. Get a tube of !Prox and rub it on with the fingers, and watch the rash disappear. P: < is mild, soothing and harm- less to even a baby's tender skin, but its action is prompt, sane and sure, Prox protects the sore skin from the irritating discharges, and healing starts AT ONCE. When the baby is constipated, or has a diarrheoa, a lite Prox introduced with the pa- tented nozzle that comes with each |package will quickly stop the condi-~ {tion and heal the soreness. Prox should be in every “Household Ba- by Kit.” When baby cries at.stoel ‘s a sure sign of a wrong condition {which can be corrected in nine cas- es out of ten by Prox. Sold at all druggists. 7 Fox & Co.Inc DEPARTMENT STORE — HARTFORD To Call Us Without Toll Charge—Call 3500 TUESDAY LAST DAY MID- 'Ihousands of Astonishing Values From Await You!

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