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EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1927. inance Committee Gives Salisbury Hartford, Nov. 22 (®)—7 meet- ing of the excc committea of the state hoard of financ $190 ERWIN AGAIN HEADS Accepts Reelection at Apnual .22 Meeting—Meeting on Schools Newington, Nov. election of officers of Grange was held las Grange hall. Al off clected with the cxception of turer, Poniol a.ce R. H. Er win nimously re-clecied I * the ith was expected that he would not ion Iy a few roufir town of Che Al Newington t night in the ors were 1o cept a re-cl Other of seer, Georse Elizabeth Mrs. Mars: Webster J. Presc erine Rowl liott; secr liott; ga dard; Pomona tre M urer i Raym wra He ) ¢ ary, eper. Mrs. ¢ tive commit 1L Potts: insu years, Charles L. Luce e office of assist & new one which was er ight's mect nee com been invi ' to provide g's program arsal of the third and ms has been ¢ mber 6 to pro 1 Cowor hich will be pu hester, Conn., December 135, Ask Root to Call Mecting = B Seleet ] 2 : Seven Pairs of T In Springfield School unced last nig cr selgetmen had req irman of the finance st Root, to call that board on. Mr. Root } ting as vet but it is ex- that one will be held within N cmergeney existe voung pupil r in the mau crowded school conditions, a meeting of {1 should be held soon in order to tuke up the subject. The school quested an 4 or the ercetion of proposed high school on the which sehool hoard chased reeently on Cedar s figure, it is said, will cover th ot most ¢ such a1 matter of rohlem for finance board commitice ppropriati o Lty the d an purch end elementary sc crected in the fu- This is the 5 Iriver of the southcastern u small ding could be > when it was needed gned to eliminaté some of ansportation of school which is necessary time. In the near futur the number of children in tion. of the town will warrant a new building, it is said building of a unit as is proposed by the school board will greatly impro school situation in Newing! the use of the town purposes and open m Hill, Junction present Center schools, for th ¥e of the lower grades. Tt will also | was annoz ¢ are unnecessary to use the portable red by the Center after such a unit is con- | ships co and this may be utilized in other part of the town. phone of the car, today to t Gt at th net driv- that sec- 15 SCHOLARSHIPS FOUNDED Cam! Mass., Nov ) blis of fifteen freshmen scholars the Tt will elimi hall for sche 10oms in th ar 192 College of- scholar- im- struet nae, in coj tion wi h an- some | niversary of Radeliffc THE NEW MEMBER. OF THE LITTLE SCORPIONS CLuB| 1S EXCUSED FROM KIS INITIAT|ON NECCO oo it l—— This Nickel’s Worth makes you believe in Santa Claus T IS DONE! Here is fine candy—lots of candy—pure candy—for 5 cents. Try Necco Chocolate Pepper- mints. Ever after, just the name will make your mouth water. You will find 8 in the box—sugary, cool centers that delight the heart and the smooth chocolate coat- ing you've been looking for. Every Necco Candy is pure and wholesome. Look for the name. ‘The New England Confectionery Company, Boston, Mass. Makers of 500 kinds of fine candy WILL YOU HOLD THIS PAGKAGE OF NECCO CHOC pPCops FOR ME TILL THE GANG PASSES BY2 8 big pieces— natural flavor, chocolate covered K¢ ACCUSE STOREMAN ¥ A Youths old, ooklyn will appear wi roorea McEnelly | theater, in this ization will present a | traction to the regular enter- ment is bring 1 Sunday eve the famous | ature at rction brought to this city for an ute con rtat each of the two | which he walked hack towed it in the hallway, a K at 4 Sunday morning. )] i 1 cc i X the can Rosenberg cut hey were 3N PLOT He Got Them to rated brown pap een wra er in which Say Then the boys with, the walls of Beder They | nd came 's shop,"” 1anded, according to neared them. Stein pped his The splushed the walls till | They dropped |SPread revolt the can ped in the baby ear. |Constantinople Rosenberg touched the match | ran. They | t in a Turkish bath as not until y around to Nobody 10 sec them, ofore, aid, because by Rumanian and foreign postal and t imagine what they were All this the youths ions, B carly last hich 100 lives emen found n in the hal talking ahout 1 Dukas, Det tapped Stein v storekeeper across the ny part in the ac rg received the were 8o ey said after a while, didn’t much mind talking. am t 1 Stoeckel Cited to yesterday Dukas's was more |larger He he satd. two had tives Crowley less from Rumanian marine officials, {strect, and plans o move the luun- on the And just a little latte e invit, <ore at Dukas | hat they | Appear in Derby Case New Haven, Nov. lay in Janus i conmon p court, which Mo Vehicle or R B, Stoeckel is cite © that court to sh n prohib ) as or's 1 of Durby o had been arr oper under liquor, g a n the was police « after 1 them need that e revoked on Commissioner Stoeckel s review of the case had 1o helieve that the charged olled upon . ont of m hich event 1 the license owever, said to were the n who examined Y of his arrest an wer costs patd 1 physici Fas 1 to buy ¥ a tin of Kerosene * but Commissioner he had authority to The court records, dise Young on | 'he first ¥ was set today, the date Commis- ‘d to ap- ow cause iting his cense of should not ested on rotor ve- | influence of | discharged payment | | leens “general prin- | sald that | led him | had been costs, in s- lose that fee of a hd found | Fis | | Yellow Cab A Great Boon to Salesmen [housands Of travelmg sales- men visit our city annually. Most of them come three and four times a year. To them the mod- ern taxicab is of inestimable value. They have learned to depend on it and can't do without it. It meets them at the depot —carries them and their bacgage to the hotel —enabling them to make move calls than they were ever able to make before and in far less time—and with far less effort. T'hus the modern taxicab fa- s—speeds up commercial trans- kes money for the salesmen by sav- g them far cilitates busine actions- : ing them valuable time and leav Pamcularly is this true in outlying districts which salesmen formerly hed in crowded street cars—making nu- merous transfers—often getting on the wrong cars. T}‘.e buslness Of se“mg has been revolutionized by the modern taxicab which car the salesmen directly and promptly to their destinations, conserves their energies and business ability and undoubtedly makes money for them. Hail Them Anywhere Ye/low Cabd Co Phone 231 Pay What the Meter Reads RUMANIAN SHIPS ARMED FOR WAR Soviet Battleships Reported Sailing Black Sea | pa . who intended to p voke a revolt among the crew, were among the ship's passengers, ! The Soviet fleet was said to lhave held manoeuvres near the Run tan, Bulgarian and Turkish during the last three months eral Soviet destroyers ca Rumantan territorial w starza in full view of army officers, Ipared to resist any attack coa insi Con- vy |Junkers Plane To;\'ed The officers hurriedly pre- | erect a proper building, the present buildings to be razed. The for a six year term. The wus bought recently by Attorney Harry H. Milkowitz, Emmanuel Richman and Mendel Sicklick. property WIFE IN HOSPITAL; POLICE SEEK HUSBAND Man Accused of hing Throat of Bucharest, Rumania, Nov. 2§ (P | Rumanian ships plied their way | Back to Horta Port Island of 1" Azores, across the Black Sea today armed Horta, 3 because of the reported presence Nov. 23 (P'—The Junkers along the steamship lanes of Soviet 1-1230 which set out for H war vessels, Grace, Newfoundland, as dusk set- The Soviet vessels, torpedo boats tled over the Atlantic, was returning and destroyers, were stated to be (!0 land in tow intent on capturing all ships which , The hcavy load which formerly belonged to the White Rus. | Carricd was supposed to have led sian fleet, the plane inability to conti h The Egyptian steamer Geheorghe | fIIht, although no exact details were Patro, which formerly was in the uvailable White fleet, remained at Constanza, | The planc, which left Norderny, 1 Rumania, fearing to leave port be. |Germany, October 4 to fly to the cause of the probability of capturs. |United States in a demonstration o Rumanian marine officials at Con- | he practicability of transatlantic stanza warned the captains of all |f¥INg was report 1 to be in tow a boats to be on the lookout also for f°W hours after it hopped off plrates, who were said to have be- | Lilli Dillenz, Viennese actress who, |, come increasingly active since the |intending to be the first woman to dismissal of Leon Trotzky from the |[IY across the Atlantic, boarded the Communist party. The pirates were |Plane at Norderny as a passenger, ¢ reported to intend to start a wide- | Was aboard the D-130. in towns bordering | Johann Ristic Alexander vo along the Black sea from Odessa to | Dentheim, Junkers pilots, {liere last Saturday to inve | Why the plane, which had been at Horta since October 14, had not continued its flight. They replaced ) Ralph Starke and Karl Locbe, who flew the plane from Pretty 18 Year Old Bride on Lonely Road t Syracuse, While Mrs. hospital herc condition from hunt was in progre N, ¥ Belle Nov. 23 P Higgins lay in a ¢ in a serious of blood, a man for her hus- 5, who is ac- throat of his side a lonely s of the city last the plane | to ago the couple ter a 1d sep- lice said 1 Doris Bird 1s met his ey S, her scenc rapidly i stopped t tacked his wife with a k fled scre g for nt of the neighbor- it Higgins escaped i \abited d > car With detachments of marines on board, the Rumanian steamers Dacia {led for Alexandria and the Prin- Maria for Constantinople. The an admiralty armed all the essels pecause of the report | that Soviet torpedo boats and de- | stroyera patrolled the route followed o R lousy was blamed hy tives for their stormy WINKLE LEASES Jacob Winkle, proprictor of automobile laundry in the rear passenger steamers. the former Bardeck property on The captain of the steamer Ras- |Arch street, has leased a plot of canu, en route from Constantinople |land 100x183 feet on the former H. to Constanza, was warned in a wire- . Walker Co. site on Commuercial irc oxp Herbert the of SEN. GOULD FOR HOOVER Portland. Maine, Nov P Arthur R. Gould, here today en route to his home in Presque Isle, 1 a month's trip to Californfa 4 the belief that Secretary Hoover should he the re- that eight Russians, armed with fdry to the new location. He will Only a handful of men know the secret of its quality louraine L'Cofl%e you might as well have the best “Electricity!— The New Helper on the Farm” Says William M. Jardine Secretary of Agriculture “Electricity has already made important con- tributions both tn labor saving on the farm and to a more modern, satisfying rural life. 1 am confident it is going to make further contribu- tions of equal or greater importance,”* cooperation between farmers and the power companies there has been an increase of approximately eighty-three per cent in the number of arms using electricity in the ast three years, HAT cheap and abun- dant electric power has done for the industrial worker and his family in the alleviation of drudgery and the betterment In simplifying the labor prob- em on the farm; lightening the load of physical toil; and increasing the comfort, con- venience and cheer of the arm home, this extension of electrical facilities to rural communities is rendering a social and economic service of utmost national importance. of living and economic condi- tions, it now promises to do for the farmer. Through the activities of the Committee on Rural Electri cation, with the cooperation of electric power companies, farm electrification is a fact To insure the continued exten- sion of farm service, it is es- sential that the American principle of individual initia- tive, by means of which these advantages have been made possible, should be encouraged and maintained, today in twenty-three states. One hundred and forty prac- tical applications of electricity to the farm have already been developed. As a result of the The complete text of Secretary Jardine’s address will be furnished upon request. The Connecticut Light and Power Company publican nomineo for president, ta the event Mr. Cooldige refuses to be a candidate. He said there is & strong sentiment in the west for Mr, Hoover. Senator George H. Moses of New Hampshire would be a wise cholce for vice president, under Mr. Hoover in the opinton of Mr. Gould, T0 THE WOMEN OF NEW BRITAIN i | . | and Surrounding Towns | Here's the most wonderful love story the movies have ever told— It will stir the hearts of all who see its beautiful | romance. AT THE CAPITOL BEGINNING SUNDAY | COME EARLY! 6:30 and 8: 7 JANET T GAYNOR./ As the wistful little Diane, | with her smile bravely strug- gling through her tears, her ! frail body bowing beneath | 'the whip of her drink-crazed sister, then Chico, a common law marriage, her Seventh Heaven—abruptly shattered | |—but see. See her wonder- ful realization come true— every cloud has a silver lin- ing—and there was one for | | Diane too! You'll love her, CHARLE® PARRELL As Chico—"That Remark- able Fellow"—He of the valiant heart, and the gay laugh, who dared to make a contract with God, win a heaven on earth for himself and his beloved Diane! You'll adore him. It Will Sweep the | Heart | Twixt, Tears and | Cheers! You'll agree with the Motion Pic- ture Critics that || “Tth HEAVEN” |lis the greatest ||love story ever 'told on the screen | Come Early i Sunday Night!