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PRES. COOLIDGE NEHINGTON NEWS probate court for the district of Hartford yesterday by |san and Thomas A. Francis. The invéntory includes real Rapld City, 8. D., Aug. 5 (UP)— | ¢y 050:" deposit, Travelers Bank & Four years in the White House st Co., Hartford, $ mount 0 o H. Stanley’ Welles, executor. Wearied by Work Which Broke! inventory amounts to s15.554.05. W w‘l The appralsers were Walter L. Mor- house and lot at the corner of Ma and Cedar strects, $5000; mortgages, would test the physical endurance ll\ !lmn estate William A ]ll"'lnrvl ish on hand, $3.3 honxv of even a heavyweigth champion and President Coolldge is beginning to show signs of the strain. | The job which broke Warren G.| Two stude f Holy Cry Harding and Woodrow Wilson has | lege, representing themselves to be furrowed lines under Mr. Coolidge’s m salesmen, canvassed sev- cyes and finally robbed him of his|cral homes at Maple Hill and Elm phlegmatic disposition. Anyone who Hill yesterday, collecting $1, from was with him through the day [ those interested and promising to terday on a trip to Deadwood could | have a magazine sent immediately. discern through the pallor of his| Their story was that they were earn- smile an indication of relief which way through college. his renunciation of the throne of Through the alertness of Constable the republican party has brought | Ravmond Halleran, the young il {men were apprehended and taken He 1s not sick, but he is tired and | home of Judge E. Stanley he will be glad when March 4 1 Judge Welles lectured the will bring him rest. His color is not | Poys and they have already return- good and his general appearance. |l money which they received. as compared with a few months ago | [hey promised to 1¢ Newington indicates he has had some slup»]”’”}"‘h'f' 1y and because of this, Tedd Hiattal ‘.‘1’:"'-‘[‘,‘“\‘.:]'"‘"“fo r:‘\('ll;:‘v'nml from bring- It anyone thinks he did not mean | ‘1€ t1€F rt. ,‘f;“:o }"‘itg‘:;“t(‘:flh“g :’m fo'r"‘T‘r i oA st fund amounting to $13- P soh hia noed but look at| 40184, from the catate of William A. dext i 1388 N need Hubbard, late of Newington will be Mr. Coolidge. Very turned over to the hoard of trustees gonnal. physicien, + 4% of the Newington Center Congres a1 able suxgRon, & tional church very soon. A hearing health is fine. He knows the presi-| "y 'y 1) on the matter, Monday, dent is nowhere near a breakdown |y oy tCp S NG e S D ten, and that he is not a sick man, el st G N Mr. Coolidge takes scrupulous eare | jmmediately after the hearing. Ac- of himself. He goes to bed early and | oording to the terms of the will only arises early. He is careful about!iy, income can be used but may be what he eats. He smokes ordinarily |spont for of the general pur- only a few cigars a day although B Gt tRB sk lately he has taken to smoking al- he late Fred Hubbard is a broth- most continuously using both cigars|er of William A. Hubbard and ac- and cigarettes. | cording to the terms of the will was After the mation’s experience With [ entitled to the life use of this trust Harding and Wilson, agitation was|fund. At his decease the will states begun to lighten the burden of the|that it shall be turned over to he presidency in the belief that the job | church. was a “man killer.” This died down when Mr. Coolidge appeared to be| Word has been recefved here that growing fat at his work. Now the|two residents of Newington who are agitation may again be revived. |traveling abroad are The retiring thing about the job is | trip. Harry Lucas has retur {hat a man feels he is always before |home at Stroud, Gloucestershire, ! hnl 1 fur watch and chs the public eye. He cannot move two | England, for a visit. Mr. Lucas feet without secret service men at his heels. His time s not his own. | He must accept a certaln number | of social engagements. He must dine with people he doesn’t want to talk to. He must entertain even| though he doesn't feel like it. Politicians and newspapermen are dogging his every movement so closely that it he Is sensitive he can- |§ not be happy. Mr. Coolidge with- stood these influences for the first| few years but now that his fourth | anniversary in the presidential chair is past, he is now ready to quit. What he will do upon his retire- ment is problematical. He is not rich but he has enough to get along on and he could return to North- | ampton for practice of advisory law. He might choose to go back and live an easy life on his farm in Ver- mont. It is not expected that he con- | templates any active position such as president of Amherst Coll or a position like that of Judge ert H. Gary in the United States Steel . Corporation. Mrs. Coolidge wants rest too. Strain of social engagements has had noticeable effect upon her and it would not bhe prising if convinced the president that they - would hoth be better oft if th went back to Vermont. Newspaper men will today have their first opportunity since the| candidacy statement was issued to question the president about it. He is holding his usnal semi-weekly conference. MAYOR GETS 55 CENTS A DAY St. Clairsville, 0., Aug. 5—Her M.*Davies, 81, has been §t. Clairsville for twenty his annual sal: riod has bheen e refused an increas didn't want to take mon earn. He has collected § various fines ce being the city's chief executive, me to this codntry about 45 y Charles Yeager is also in Eng- . Mr. Yeager is in London and will travel through England and | thence through Germany. Members of the Christian En- | deavor of the Newington Center Congregational church have voted o suspend meetings of the organi- zation until September. Farm Gully Reclaimed For Trees and Vines hville, Tenn., Aug. 5 (A — s not simply a gully to State r R. S. Maddox To him it prospective site of a grove of the farmer, halt the crosion of his lands and hide an unsightly spot. r 12 years he has carried on a I gully camouflage” in { which Tennes has heen un’que among te His method is to plow off the gully banks build a | few hush dams to check the sliding | soil and set out hlack locust fast-growing tree with “fence post™ ties. Grasses and vines States department of became inferested i and as a re- e followed Ten- Jack RZhbit No Prude In His Dietary Habit ‘ashington, Aug. rabbit is nothing if not broadminded concerning his dict. He prizes a nice, his kind wge dail e Prairic friend and confi- jackrabbit, destroy 50 ent of the more palatable rous competition to do- ¥ will mow down young wheat as definitely as a scythe. Al“help along aviation” with the cs- 2 'h may earn money for | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1927. To his rstate Muclntosh, (ri South Dartmouth, 2 . Aug. (A—Colonel E. H. R. Green, on son of the famous Hetty Green, he original ideas about what a mil-| lionaire’s estate should be. |South Dartmouth. An old windmill is set up and preserved, an ancient whaleship enshrined, a radio broad- casting station established, a short- wave radio experimental station set in operation. And now the colonel purposes to tablishunent of a great airport on his estute. I project will involve filling and levelling two large swamps, |covering two asphalt roads hun- |dreds of yards in length, and build- ing new roads to take their place. |There are also the matters of mov- ing a wind mitl and an old black- |smith shop, of changing the location of the masthead and lifeboat of & {wrecked whaler, building hangars and providing lights for landing. “Doesn’t matter how much trou- {Dle it is” the coloncl says, his |broad genial face lighted by an ever present smile. “I just want to do all I can to help along aviation. They're just beginning now, and all we can do is to try to help them. | What we do this year may all have (to be torn down and done over next Iyear. But what of that? We've done what we could.” Green's name has been aade familiar to thousands through the powerful station that broad- asts radio programs brought by telephone wire from New evening the roads at - are black with automo- iven there by persons de- siring to hear the prorgams from | great loudspeakers. On the same property may be seen strange radio antennae—ori- entable antennae—used in the ex- 'OUR BOARDING HOUSE Vou GoT-’ DRoP ou ME BUSTER, WHEK ‘\'HA'\’ BRANCH PULLED HEAD lwwr IM TUST A-THUMB N —TH' S0UP DISGUISED WITH A GLOVE ! wwe % ~= 1 S'POSE You'LL VELL COPPER o -’ 0THER GWs, AN oT oF cAMP T Go rH A F\F—N-tao-r HEADSTART wne WELL < TLL Go, 1827 BY NCA STRVICE. INC. SUMP —TH' MA’JOQ AR Uan Ko LET EM STAY e ' WIG OFF MY . e BUT DONT HAVE “TAKE “THINGS T oWVE BEEN MADE T STAR GoAT WY WrHosT AS URDERSTUDY, FoR “THIS ACT! =~~~ PUT YouR Wlé BACK oN, AN GoTHRY WrH —TH' DISGUISE, e T WONT 9t A -THiNG ABoWT-THIS! e TLL SEE “THAT VU By Ahern ST A GOOD “TIME, AN COLONEL GREEN BUILDS AIRPORT ON OLD MASSACHUSETTS ESTATE...... o oo “101d Scout Relics South Dartmouth, 3 (upper left) pointing out to his engineer. 2 ght) and hie has a museum in the whaling bark Charles Morgan (below). COLLEGE SPREADING BOOST CITY TAXES Which Automatically Come Oft the Tax Lists Cambridge, Mass., Aug. 5 P—The great educational institutions which have added world-wide fame to this city are not an unmixed blessing a chamber of commerce committee has found. 1t reported that Cambridge prop- erty was $30,000,000 under assessed chiefly because of the big holdings of its colleges. A conferenc® was recommended with officials of Har- tute of Technology to see what steps, if any, could be taken to halt the continuous acquisition of property by these two institutions. It w serted that as holdings were diverted to educational us they automatically came off the ta list, forcing up the tax rate and dis- couraging new developments. It was suggested that the state levy on the city be reduced In order to offset its present losses which were than those of any other city in the country. California Pianist Popular in England London, Aug. 5 (P—Miss Martha Baird, young California planists, is becoming increasingly popular in England. She appeared in several engage- ments with the London Symphony Orchestra and® the Queen's Hall Symphony Orchestra, . with Sir Thomas Beeclam and Sir Henry Wood conducting. langer, once the home of Lord Byron, Miss Eaird played before an “askfor Horlick's “The ORIGINA . Malted M|Ik For Infants, Ingalids, All Ages add an airport, which he is shown ¢ radio station operated by Gordon vard and the Massachusetts Insti-| described as proportionally greater | | audtence including Mrs. Alanson B. Houghton, wife of the American ambassador; the Duchecss of West- minster, Princess Nicolas Galit- zine, Mrs. Benjamin Guinness and others of note. Py e Left to University Fayettville, Ark., Aug. 5 (A — Nine years after his death, the University of Arkansas has just learned it is to receive the valuable collection of Indian relics of Cap- tain Carlos L. Von Berg, famous EXTRA! owr 30 TWO 5 [perimental broadcasts from a short [tance in short wave transmission. wave station. Here Gorden G. Mac- | The experimenters {alk regularly intosh, Aasea i Tsalts nology, onel Green's There is somcthing going on ail|determined that a vertical antenna jon a great concrete base as a mu-| y= Free sample sent conducive to the greatest dis- seum of ancient whaling days, the time at his big property in|i | Malted Millkc acins, Mdteep Upon retiring, drink a hot cupful of employed by the with an operator in New Zealand. ..Horhckv,,"mdnot-ltsquietmg:ficct centstopay mt- Nothing but TRAFFIC TYDOL can flow from the sealed Tydol pump YEAR and a half ago Tide Water successfully de- feated gasoline substitution by sealing the intake pipe on every Tydol pump. And now that new thou- sands every day are demandix:; the New Traffic Tydol, the Sealed Pump becomes morc important to motorists than ever before. | - v It means that only Traffic Tydol can flow from a black and orange Tydol pump. It means that whenever you stop at a Tydol pump you’re sure of getting the genuine Traffic Tydol, the gasoline designed specifically for driving in present-day traffic. The Tydol dealer will gladly show you the seal which protects you—and your pocketbook—from goline substitution. Try Traffic Tydol todayt Tide Water Oil Sales Corporation 990 Windsor Ave., Hartford, Conn. 7z TYDOL TRAFFIC Economy GasoLINE H‘All gasoline from Tydol pumps is TRAEFIC Tydol ‘Bep !nslnuw of Te f'l\-‘ N the short wave station upontheuredbmmnndner‘lts- Itin- and Shirley L. Davis, Col- stands the 86-year old whallng| gycegsound,refreshingsleep, fromwhich resident expert, have |bark Charles Morgan—now mounted | one awalkens rested and invigorated. receipt of four t. K, Horlick's At the home of Baroness D'Er- | all materials. suits in all. morrow! MORE FANCY COLLAR SHIRTS $2.50, FRESH LEAN TEL. 483 ATTACHED Sold regularly at $2 and BROILERS, Ib.. SIRLOIN, ROUND STEAKS, bb................. % BONELESS POT ROASTS, Ib. .... government scout. ‘When Von Berg died in 1918, he left most of his property to his wife and also specified his collec- tion was to remain in her posses- slon until her death. For this rea- son contents of the paper were not made public, but recently the exe- cutor decided to file the will. Among the autographed pictures of notables {s one of Theodore Roosevelt, still resting where the “Old Scout” placed it among those of Indian chieftains, READ THE HERALD CLASSIFIED EXTRA! wnd $35 TROUSER SUI A special lot, carefully se- lected. All sizes, all colors, About 50 They’ll go to- BOYS SCHOOL UITS With 2 Knickers. _ Formerly $10 to $12. SATURDAY $ 5.95 STRAW HATS AT COST! i b 3 FOR $4.00 BATHING SUITS REDUCED 25% NYSDawd Schalls?gso ” 357 MAIN STREET GUARANTEED MARKET WHY PAY MORE? LEGS GENUINE SPRING LAMB, Ib. ....... 35 TENDER FRICASSEE CRHICKENS, bb.............. % TENDER YOUNG NATIVE FOWL, Ik....... 35 NATIVE .25 csescee PLATE CORNED BEEF, bb........10c CLOVERBLOOM PRINT BUTTER, b................. 8% GUARANTEED MARKET 70 WEST MAIN Henry Bibeault, Mgr.