New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 10, 1927, Page 11

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CAN YOU TELL WHO ALL OF THESE PEOPLE ARE? Here is the names are household wor the lady in No. 46 is known by the nickname fourch picture Just to help you out, “Ma.” in the space below; save the slip until you have filled in all six puzzles, we'll remind you that then send them to the Picturs Puzzle Editor of The Herald. In answer to the requests received at this office, The Herald will print, at the same time the prize winners are announced, the people whose pictures are printed. announced Saturday, November 19th. names of The winners of the varfous prizes will be Some of the children, who have not read the rules have sent in their answers which very, ared was chara Billy Sunday One extra good looking gentleman whose photo ap- as the “Gooed Looking Puzzle Judge.” Another was named Governor Trumbull, There's a Mrs. Mayor Weld was the answer to another amusing. It cterized plcture of hint dropped right there. Judd evidently resembles a United States senator, Harry Ginsburg of the Kddy-Glover Post, American | Legion looks like one of Sinclair's lawyers. The contest rules stipulates | to save the pictures until the end of the contest, but the children don't etc. one. Alderman and Commander scem to grasp that point. This little siory about the contest is to give you a few more hints which are as fair for one person as for another. are no plctures That's a fact and ther of local people in the entire set of six group pictures. 's no catch to that statement. Answers will not be | taken aver the telephone. There's plenty of time until noon, Wednesday, | November 18, to bring or mail your set of complete answers in to The Herald. Anybody connceted with The Herald is disharred from trying in the contest, and it wouldn't be fair to ask gny of The Herald staff who is represented in the pictures, The telephone has been used for that gentle art’too. Be sure and try your luck today. Look in .lh\) ciassified a hint or two. ads for WRITE YOUR ANSWERS HERE *up * I flicted. The B. * that the jazz-fiends, Submitted by (Name) (str “t Number) (City) | hall, Nov. 16-17.—advt. Follow the crowd to T. A. B. hall | Nov. 16-17 and get a good laugh.— advt. Charles Goudrault of 28 Clinton street has reported to the police the | theft of a tire off his car in his gar- age. John Donati of Norwich and Miss Florence Shechan of 246 street, were married in Norwich, Oc- tober 10, by Rev. A. J. Bailey, a re- City Items Tickets for The Absent Minded | tridegroom, T. A. B. hall, Nov. 17 for sale at M. J. Kenneys, advt. The Absent Minded Bridegroom,” farce in three acts, T A. B. hall, Nov. 16-17.—advt. Why have aches and pains when you can cure them at the T. A. B. the office of the town clerk today ! shows. J. Hamilton of Woostc ported to the police the theft of a tire off his automobile in front of the Citizens' Coal Co. oftice. The police are investigating a re- port by Archie Arbour mody street that 10 gallons of wine werd stolen from the cellar of his tome last night. Picture Awards ‘The first prize will be $10, the second $5 and the third and fourth prizes will be $2.50 each. Then there will be ten prizes of passes for two at the Capitol theater, good for any time during the week after the ccntest ends. e etk VLAY “ RALD CLASSIFIED ADS puzzle—featuring a lot of people whose | Write your answers | the list of all the | There | . |wards of § ast Main | turned marriage certificate filed at | street re- | of 88 fllr- { ¥EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, RADIO GAVALIERS INCONGERT HERE With Miss Dragonette Appear Under B.& P.W. Club Auspices Classic and popular music com- peted for favor on a program given | by the National Cavaliers and Jessica | Dragonette, lyric soprano, at the T. | |A. B. hall last night, where the| WEAF broadcastinly luminaries | | were sponsored in concert by the 1Buslnou and Professional Women's | club. 1 | The competition lasted for only | {one and a quarter hours, when the | | concert was over—one of the short- | ost_ever heard hereabouts, | | During that pertod the broad- | casting troupe had projected 11 | popular pieces, seven élassicals, and | | four semi-classicals, the latter in- | | cluding Negro spirituals and folk | I 0NgSs. | | The acore: Two of the classical got more applause than any others | and the other classicals got as much | {applause as the best of the popll-‘ lars. | The classicals would have landed | |even more applause than they got |1t the singers had possessed better | | volces. Miss Dragonette was far re- | moved from a Rosa Ponselle, while | \(he four men making up the Caval- | |ters quartet had anything but in- | | dividual volces. But when the bo. | sang their jazz it was with the sang- |frold, hair-trigger attacks, and | certainty of high-tension harmony | associated with a good jazz or- |chestra. The popular pieces were | | delivered with such dance band | | technic, in fact, that one could near- |ly imagine the saxophones doing | their stuft. I | When the singers tried to function | as soloists, however, their lack of individual attainment was very evi- | |dent. Yet it was a bass solo, Dar- D L O s s o which commanded the most pro- cluded its 1 neral sessions here this nounced salvos of applause. An en- | MOFRINE With the election core was demanded for the length C°TS of a_minute, but the singer shook his | Miss Mary Bulkley head to signify he had no other re-clected pr ready. Probably he could have sat- |¢lccted are: Vice-president, |isfled everyone by repeating the |Herbert Knox Smith, ¥ {Grenadiers song. The applause, of MrS. Annie G. Porritt, West Hart- |course, was largely for the power |ford; Mrs. Emerson R. Newell, iof the song rather than the artistry Greenwich and Mrs, Henry H. Town of the singor. send, New Haven: secretary, Mrs, Another song that brought out |Stanley M. Cooper, W Br latent enthusiasm was the “Non So |treasurer, Mrs. William P. Couch, Pul,” by Mozart, sung by Miss Drag- | Cromwell; directors at I: Mrs. She was dressed in a man- Harry Coe, Waterbury; M inish costume of ye olden time, short | Georgiana Davids, Riverside; Mrs. |trousers, fluffery and a wig. She |E. F. Dustin, West Hartrord: Miss emulated operatic motions, or pos- | Ellzabeth Farnam, New Haven: M Isibly acting, and did this plece of |G. S. Hubbell, South Norwalk; Mrs Mozart in a most excellent manner. | F. L. C. Kitchelt, New Haven; Mrs | The tenor, Robert Stevens, was|D. R. Mitchell, New London; Mrs MRS. ST/ Waterbury, Conn., Nov. 10 (P— The state convention of the Conne Hartf Oth, M rmington of w ident ! onette. N e, !Mns STANLEY COOPER IS CHOSEN WOMEN VOTERS LEAGUE OFFICIAL of offi- |z n; | THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1927, TRAVELOGUES BY ‘GLOBE TROTTERS' Gommonwealth Club Members Learn How “Other Hall” Lives Travel talks by three local zens composed the program at the season's Lrst meeting of the Com- | monwealth club, held last evening in |the First Congregational church | chapel. | | krauk H. Johnston told of his trip | to the biennial international conven- | |tion of the Chamber of Commerce at Stockhoim, Sweden. The royal 4 entertwinment in the capital city of the world |and the of the scenic wonders | neld the attention of his audience. | After the convention the delegates | traveled to the farthest north point land saw the midnight sun and the | tremendous glaciers. Miss Mabel Adams of the Senior | high school faculty entertained her steners with what she called “A ries o Climaxes,” display- manner and diction. nt 8ix weeks in England, two nd one in Switzerland. appreciative recital of | ions and wealth ry and classical allusions en- d every stage of her trip. Ioone told about his s & young lawyer in among the “cracker” wset- rs from Kentucky and Tennessee. showed the laxity of the courts the evil life of the people. He told of a judge who gave a minor pr 0 years in jail p while the young awyer and clerk of the court fixed interpretation of the sentence nd freed the prisoner. After & se- re freeze which killed the orange banks cloged one after only the English banke survived. He himself was left with 1 to some swamp land as his ct. The man who had given claimed he had 1d and got drunk threat. He acc own mule, which the strect and | it out of him. Then | ined o of and so of | | | citi- | welcome | cleanest her ex- offense | Willlam Wort [ reported v ress of 1 pon National who emphasi point work to carry out hom L v national lentally his sround in ross Reeolutions introduce favoring the Briand | world court and fury women, were adopt | resolution of symps ple Vermont and the Tulia M od wor Boone driver Florida. company came out service we e Italian Woman \\ n(er ‘ \\ ins Nobel 1926 Prize | Nov (rp)— l’li‘; for literature for 1 awarded o he Ttal Grazia peo- ploring naman, not- 1 husiness ol one | i suffr. and pri prog 1 n for ning year was added the new bei state and federal work ¥ infancy, and problems in relation to to, writer ixation It mater- : 3 would be ultural rded | tariff. e { for lure. |traces of worry for the tenor. lally the singer cracked on {nots, but recovered after that and by a superhuman effort to retrieve |nis in-fortune, improved wonder- | |tully, so that the latter part of the | plece was twice as well given as the |first half, Which is just an instance of the liftle troubles singers are leternally being subject to: small| |\wonder, perhaps, that they get tem- peramental off-stage. | The accompanist was the best part of the show, although his name was not even mentioned on the pro- lgram or the NBC posters. The | gentleman was equally at home in !spanking “symphonic jazz” out of {the piano, or in etching the subtle- ties of the classics. A rara avis, 5o o speak. 5 i easy to determine that this Ware as NBC troupe owed all of its success C0ck, & to its coach, whoever he may be, and Hallock of Der| to the musical directors, etc., who Were guests of have drilled them into such sterling ins, whith cnsemble artistry. They never filled 'percentage of members the hall with sonorous sound—they| Mr. Hallock, in an simply lacked the vocal power to do talk, dealt with selling {so—but they had their places chines, He said the groats earned” to the last saxophone-like ‘the companies salesmen embellishment. iby frequent visits to the | The size of the audlence was not Mr. Blish spoke on hehalf to expectations—not by half a Connecticut Hardware |hall. The concert was & valuable |John Gillis, a member !1aboratory experiment. 8o to speak; lorganization and a | whether the public was eagerly 10-of the Precision I clined to visit a concert hall where Co. of ph |radio-like entertninment Was I grinding whe orogress, where popular tunes were thoir yse !mixed with the classics, 80 a8 0 Complving with the “appeal to all tastes” the fetish cach meating a member | with which the broadcasters are &f- | oqunts he sells and this & P. W. has gained | ko yoren of thq Minnes the experience that the plan WOR't [ o p "y tacthrtiet Gol work; that numbers of the so-called | py ", oy MOC T “musical people” don't want their "0 TS CH BRAEEE r;:ood music mixed with jazz, and | G0, 0 B0 P n”x“”d A sippoRed ito Qb‘ the Hardware Toosters club {in such an overwhclming majority. |1\ QFCIE Tloosturs chub [won't pay for what they like, ecing (¢ [t COMC 000 Sl | that they get so much of it free. sk ety —G. H. annual banquet of the Connc | T Hardware association in Hartfor! Awarded Vast Tract e s L NUTMEGGERS HEAR TALKS ON SELHNfi his lack of confidence in every mea | The accompanist also showed Fine Points of Salesmanship DlS cussed at Meeting l (n- Anteresting talks by men ful In the field of salesman tured the monthly “Nutmeggers,” which the Burritt hotel last night. F. T. Blish of South Manc president of the Connecticut ciation; Henry S, tar and vice honor at was attended hip fea- of the held in meet was Havd Hitch Donald sident meet pr the Ly 1 large teresting 1shin S5t ma- id gained factory of the tion to of the locs representa Grinding Wheel told how made and of custom tells of 1l of Mi [ body social i (el on the night before the assoc After 50-Year Delay annual — convention i Hollywood, Cal. Nov. 10 (P— [C¥Til E. Sullivan is sec After waiting nearly halt a century freasurer of the “Nutme for his reward for advisory service p=she s ! to the Papago Indians of Arizona, R. } MAPLE HILL NEWS | R. Martin, mining engineer today | had a deed to 175,000 acres of land | [in that state, valued by him at up- |« nuice o eniit e 08,0007 made for the New Rritain Children's The reward was for Martin's serv= | Home at the all day Scwing me. e lices to the Papagees as successor 10 (holq by the Woman's Club of Mapl. | Colone! Robert ¥. Hunter, sent from | Hill yesterday at the home of Mis | Washington by the Catholic Bureau {N. E. Mann on Robbins avenuc. |of Missions for Indians. Colonel |Luncheon was scrved at noon by 1 | Hunter acquired title to about 2,- icommittee which consisted of M {146,500 acres, whila actiag as ad- [R. B. Doane,' Mrs. H. Cozswoll viser to tribesmen. At Hunter's re- | Mrs. William Kinner, and Mre, M. J | quest, Martin undertook the work Shonts, | when the colonel died. | A benefit given by the ]=_—_——-—'_-— November 18, home of Mr: ‘Give Helpful Attention |tns wvernc To Swoolen Joints To get relief when pain tortured |Joints and muscles keep you in con- stant misery rub on Joint-Ease. wion” January tary gers en bridge party will he club, Friday.afternoon at 2:15 o'clack at the B. J. Hubert on Rob- The next meeting of the Woman's Club of Maple Hill will be held next Wednesday afternoon af 2:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. William Allen on Robbins avenue. The program | for the afternoon will consist of mu- It is quickly absorbed and you g ang current events by Mrs. Clar- can rub it in often and expect Te- cnce F. Bennett of New Britain. sults more speedily. Get it at Fair | mia hostess®will be assisted by Mrs. Dept. Store or any drugglst "“1 H. Latham and Mrs. W. R. Pond. | America. It is & good inexpensive remedy,! Dr. and Mrs. Leon Dary of Mapl {for a tube lasts a lonk time and |Hill avenue have returned from a \caqu but 60 cents. It penetrates. |few days’ stay in New York. | FREE—Send name and address | £ for large. generous sample tube to | | Pope Laboratories, Hallowell Maine. Mrs. M. Nordstrom and family of | Robbins avenue attended the golden 10 el «d machin s of ice, has | n off the t Rock- (A—The | Kickapoo, win y W st Hartfc The M apie a > an ef- | lanes » the off- r years m com- world, Mrs. omps side first thermometer was made icl Daniel Fahrenheit in e n cxperiments, he - g ed spirits of stead of mer- 1 ns avenu pir in 1 mer the Thurs his carly wine in his glass tub Fourteen Women Are Re-elected in England Tondon, Nov, 10 (B —Of the rous mayors ed in T Welsh towns, 14 are cluding Miss Margar. Lord X That nun women, in- van, wel- Liver Tiriti pool. It il life nayores for the the 1 the new mayor pointed her e the inmomaly in h n title r wo s is wife oth ar s 1o assist so- Welsh, puthampton function Mrs, dae] 5 dang yore s 1o sh the of- social by I\\hun a man walks out of here with a Suit, ¢ con- fident that we've waited on him in a way that will mnI\(’ him glad to call again. We're courtes headquarters as well as blue-quarters for Dorit Ignore Acid Scalp! Fadeprogf MI DDISHADE @ Blue Serge Suxts Our Blue Overcoats acknowledged the best || Investigate, vou will see cost of are values in town. compare and that we lower dressing well. are very popular this season. Correctly styvled, moderately priced, in a larece selection, We have all been too close to peo- whose hair had a whle . It is due to an that soap and water arc to nt. You may not acid Or you may have na not it. But dandruis uld make and hair that s a dull nd the i notice dity For Days HOSE | These Snappy HHOLEPROOF WOOL UPERBA DRESS SCARFS 'ERS GLOVES “Like Ol Fricnds Look Wel Tomikowski & Dawson 361 MAIN STREET powerl have 1p. strings” When ha Rfter a it rh curling— few hour is time to 1 v drdps of this h entific preparation will check acid- ity, and give vour hair such love- ly softness that dressing it will be a delight. 1t will arrange easily, and stay as you arrange it. Every par- ticle of scale will be dissolved. Tt makes an amazing difference. And or only thirty-five cents your drug will give you a bottle of Dan iderine that will last for we dead” look all the rine., sel- hey Wear and | out of iron Tust st The Store For Yo PARENTS WATCH CLASSES AT CENTRAL JUNIOR H. §. Puplls Hold Regular Sessions While Fathers and Mothers Observe Teaching Methods. A special night session of last night so that parents could ob- e the method of teaching. There was & large number at the session and the class rooms were crowded at all times. The Central Junior shops were in full ewing so that the program of trades could be shown and demon- strated. During the evening there were auditorium activities going on under the dircction of Mrs. Tnez Henry Babcock, who has charge of tr vork. Also there were on p s ghown for the parents of t ool yard activities, The last perlod was devoted to ¢ work, the clubs mecting in their clubrooms. The new phase of club work being developed in this school lub the Central Junior high school was held | | held a great deal of interest for th | parents as it is an innovation. In formation aids were provided in th hallways so that the greatc:( amount of help could be given. Th: crowds experienced no difficulty finding the rooms and their ws around the two buildings. clasees were in session from |9 o'clock. Brings 81,000 Suit for Heating System Damago Because of * 10 a heat system in a building on High stre ced to | 1 caused by th ligence endant, Salva the de nzo, thro; brov E Patrick John 8. Recor damages Smith. Con mages has b ¥ ch, Prop My« thony ave brou uft 1 John Mic | Greenberg & Lew cor performed gal service The best meal you ever cooked NEB day I heard Gulden's M mm ing. ltnedninbuflo-{md mixed it in before I served my spinach. The results were deli- Gious—something new in flavor- ing. My husband mid, ‘It's the best meal you ever cooked!” = I'il.ll.llEN'S Spread Gulden'’s over meats before roasting or broiling. Mix a few drope in vegetables whxl- cooking. This adds a new, richer flavor. Write for free hm Book, Charles _Gulden, lnc., Dept. F, 48 Elizabeth Et., New York City. MUSTARD Useitasa seasoning in cookmg Mothers, you can't start too y to establish a child’s serene and anquil disposition. Iven an infant can have a happy, fretless state of uninterrupted health. What will help do this? A simple, purely vegetable product as old as you are plain Casto . A few drops of Ci all uncasiness in a jiffy. Will dispel colic or ward off constipation; and just as surely check diarrhea. In real sickness call a physiclan. But many physicians urge only Cas- storfa will settle | toria for those little ehldish disor-| ders that need nothing more. You need Casto It 1s safe and perfectly for it contains no paregor- no opiates, no dope of any kind. least, this is true of the genuine Fletcher's Castoria*—and that s/ the kind doctors tell you always to buy Fleteher's Castorla 1s fine for any | child. All children love to take it. harmless, *“The Champagne MINER, REAI 'r be afraid to give pure| s good look for the Fletch signature on the package and yo will know you have the genuine and pure Castoria. * SPECIAL NOT! | bottle of genuine ¥ is wrapped a book on “Care | Feeding of Bables” worth its weizht in gold to every mother or prospec- tive mother, as With every cher's Castorin nd | Children Cry for J ez 0.8 P OB of Ginger Ales” ) & TULLOCK Special Demonstration of Dennison’s Crepe Paper craft by an artist direct from Dennison’s NOV. Fifth Avenue Studio. Come and learn to make all kinds of crepe paper novelti 14th to 19th — HALL’S — “Prices Are Right” 179-183 ARCH STREET NEW BRITAIN

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