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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1927. |door. There was an odor of liquor [ago because of the |apparent and he placed Ci proce and numecrous out- | more chero | breaks of trouble between them, was | desir, than any other p! Case Continued OF LIFE: $1,300,000 TO L s em e NEWINGTONBOARD FLASHES APPROES PLANS. ts estimate that ad- news- Ford additional. only for- used in New 1l Motors devoted puper advertising $1,300.000 In Will Buy Fire Hose—To Divide T el Equipment Costs nt $400,000 the Newington, . ind patron of mu- N of P e chapter of and Mary, that Amer- « almighty ernin vor Thompsor 1 over the cago dis World interviewed Boston 1o know that a day were not would he re- from how York York t of <hips off th dot 2 The is liquor By the| gots its Coloucl Hugh fine \ for n Muskoge that " ns- Scott has protection , Okla,, gave it purpose at o tare- has heen York—A hroker sa danei widow ¢ Man- of a million. She at a night club. s that he | feet of ny—The “infernal” is now tahoo in the Sub- their honeymoon | Victoria, 61, . but now has him evel family former n rode her on the v that 27-year-old heen hurt, she will not to use such a vehiel rmit for this « Lin, in preparat - % fourt Geneva—The bhest horsewoman of Europe is Madame erlar S 1ss of candid . December won the cup of Dians competition of women of five | An Irish jumper took her rst in a steeplechase. in a light, in paid \atic power and t DBrazil, o m companies = New York—Dr, leria H. Park- BURY’S FLOUR 2412 LB BAG \ PASTRY sgo9 ) | N s 8 9*, 4 BAG 7 Pure refined—the best shortenin Pure Lard Keeps 1chite clothes white—safe for colors! P8 G Soap {merica’s favorite breakfast recipe! Aunt Jemima "R Full count rolls of large perforated sheet. Toilet Paper "&5r CREPE The big cake that protectsboth clothes mu”lumls.'z Ivory Soap ermont Maid Syrup Preserves AwP Cuest ivory Soap Mule Team Borax Camel, Lucky Strike, Old Golsd, Chesierfield FB2 CARTON OF Cigarettes 10 PKGS Brer Rabbit Molasses Quaker Oats 'PRE" 24¢ Gulden’s Mustard Comet Rice 7 The finest of s Grandmother’s Bread . AT ANTIC & PACIFIC | causes fatal injuries to ( ill and materials produce this finest loof! er is at persons who because of progres 2 views re suspected of | unpatriotic. She teld the Council of Women, president, that a rmed her that high' official such ers at Washington b nizance had 1 taken of them, Havana- moth concert in front of the dential palace. One thousand sicians are to parade and play protest against the employment American rivals in cabarets r shops. Health has informed Master Barbers' sociation that use of whisk brooms by porters is unsanitary, t from cage Cor- m of new Ya arence e, iron worker., Haven—sixty-four sopho- clected to membership in cight Yale junior fraternities, ow mor Manchester— Pre-automobils lled when sudden &now makes village smithy of most popular characters. storm town's Willimantic les AL € , re- publcian, chosen mayor as republi- cans sweep to vietory in eity elec- tions. Aressed ent Danbury—Wel of cvident refin 1sks police 1o lock him up so he won't “kill some- body” professing to remember only vaguely escaping from a California | asylum two years ago. Darien—Suffering from tuberculo- sls in incurable stage, Agenlina Pur- s0, 21, of Stamford, dies from shock when taxi in which she is returs Tom truck. from sanatorium collides with Hartford—TFirst Connceticut 1 test of itutionality of ‘federal es- tate tax is,started when Tax Com- missioner Blodgett disallows as cred- it the federal est < on $500,000 cstate of late Daniel G. Perkins of Hartford. co artford—State Policeman George Sisson of New London, attached to roton Barracks, suspended from force, 24%: LB BAG s109 ) J e 2-31° CAKES zsc wous PE° 21° soTTLE 20€ AR 26¢ 6 caxss 25¢ e 14¢ 1.19 NO. 1% 23¢ LARGE CAKES CANS' Y- 10 R 13¢ 9c PKG LARGE LOAF TEA €o. There's to be a mam- presi- mu- s of and | young man | ing | zal | ADVERTISE NEW LIZZIE'S DEBUT! irred by a “black list” aimed | ing | ational of which she is had had been filed by self-constituted accus- t that no cog- | | st commission to secure title pi round out state avenue and Washi for futuer office ture Lighway At the Lexington loc 1Pellows’ this wer s given the named chairmar mititee for the bration . The usual dates which lowing thr postponed until th the of the lunch GRUNKEN DRIVER HEAVILY FINED Jail Sentence Imposed But Execution Suspended to five riy in prop pproximat house icpartm = = cadin to the charge of L 0. 0. ¥. NOTES, t - automobile w ! weokly mecting of in 14 hall y evening of candidates will Jeld in O 00 and costs and for 15 days, exe- ispend- Roche in | k a class of Henry P, lay. Muszynski testified Th . the corner of H r W 1 v € ind Winter street ahont 5 cvening when he wa automobile at the co Elm streets. On found the wrecked o the hward on ning Dec will have to furnis occasion. eve of Krans committ the icided to discontinue driving. upernumerary |y {under arrest. charged with | Licutenant Samuel Bamforth tes- | (tified that he smelled Ciachero when he was brought hv»:’\\i fore him at police headquarte and 12 year: Attorney S. Gerard Casale, repre- |ski that unle senting Ciachero, said the automo- |order to the bile has caused the family trouble tion Officer Connolly, h connected | quired to post a bond o |because of the expense {with it, and now Ciachero has de-|to jail for si He is hard pressed financlally and unablg | to pay a fine immediately. He had | a few drinks of wine and was try- ing to reach home when the mishap occurred. The attorney asked that twenty-four hours be allowed for raising the money and Judge Roche said he would place Clachero on probation so that he would not be obliged to make payment at one e. He was also ready to release chero in custody of his attorney until tomorrow, but the latter ca he did not care to assume the sponsibility. Probation fied that Pis aging $29 a |and shoula t what to do i should be pu working sche sured him th to have a ve out the orde Kowski said with his fam week besides xpenses, but Must Support Wife he merits of Stanley Piskowski, aged 33, of 75 [zone into by .yman street, who was ordered to Alling and it apart from his wife some time that the pre Roche ordered him liquor from { week towards and thre |$12, but Piskowski wanted to Lnow him from jail if he does not c non-support and Judge| The cas to pay $12 the support of children, aged 5, rned Piskow- | T the abelus, r 1- r ro- ol pigeon” cases of alle v law to be of Vincenzo DiMauro 329 Church street, charg- h violation of the liquor law was continued until Attorney Thom- pregenting DiMeuro, ood the police have a as there are oth. 1 violation of the h ess he rrics out ction of Prof 1l be 50 or g0 ty days. Officer Connolly kowski has been a week at a local factory herefore b that time., Company I Veterans to Stage Cld Time Dance 1 many T Veterans' third annual old dance at the state sirect tomorrow purely an invitation being charged, imvited a large Round and featured. The able to pay n the at on an dule. Judge Roch at he would be ry good excuse eve Lold i ion to Arch rry onrt. Pis- rather live pay $12 a his own living Judge Roche told him |commite consists of I tha ion had been ' C. Wi 4 hout, Wil- 1dge Saxe and Judge liam Montag aul, Har- had been established |1 > i Lo sent 2 nent was t Jar r of the on he would ily than meeti sit I¢ was a mocking Fate indeed that created the situation illustrated here. On one side of the curtain, a youth eup~ posed to be a paragon of innocence and virtue surprised fi the arms of one of the most notorious women of the town; on the other side the b ard popular girl ho had thrown theyouth over b o was *:too slow. From “Hell's Highway,” Jaruary irue Story Magazine). When Flaming Youth Steps Out. (Above)—"I OPENED THE LOCKET, AND—"— Fata plays trange tricks with human hearts at times — but norie miore han the ironic circumstance that compelied a good iful woman to make the supreme sacrifice for the man she loved. This touching story, ' He Wanted Children,” appears in January True Story Magazine. [99] THE main lounge of a modern college fraternity. In the corner, ayouth reading quietly. A dissi- pated but faultlesslyattired youngman regls intothe room. He addresses thestudiousone boisterously: “What ho, big boy! Not stepping out tonight?. . Awright. Havetotoddic along. Gota red-hot mamma that craves attention.” He grabs a halffilled flask from the table and hurries from the house. 415 A bench on the campus. Ty ing about a forthcoming sorority dance. First Girl: “Who are you bringing?" Second Girl: “Ithought I'd take that nice new frater- nity boy. He's awfully good-looking and— First Girl: (laughing scornfully) “That poor sap? Sav, I had a date with that mother’s darling—and when we got home he dropped me as if | was some- thing contagious. He'd no more think ‘(:f kissing a girl than of strangling his grandmother. [@118] Two men students meet on the library steps. Joe: “Say, Jim, how'd you like to strut your stuff at a 1acan party tonight?” Jim: “‘Surest thing you know.” Joe: “Well, a couple of women are putting on a prayer-meeting for me at their home tonight and they want me to bring a friend. One of ’em is married, but her husband works nights, Gotta be careful, though, and keep this dark.” Stories of Real Life Frankly, Thrillingly Told The romantic doings of imagi- nary people in a believe may inter times. But for stories that really grip the imagination and thrill the emotions, we mu: thrilling drama of Itis these qualiti Januar She Conldn’t Escape Love Trapped by Destiny Movie Mad Her Last Moment (Above)—*'YOU LITTLE WILD CAT,” he cried. A motherless girl's longing to escape the crude sur- roundings of her rough mountain home and the deo- termination of a ruthless young scoundrel to drag her down to his own level, aro vividly described in “Whispering Tongues,”” January True Story JANUARY '[rue Did I Do Right? Burglar Salvation of a Bank Whispering Tongues Sto On Sale At All Newsstands reality that have won for True Story Magazine such a wide audi- enceof regular readers. In its pages we meet, not the mere puppets of literary fancy, butliving, breathing human beings who love, hate, struggle, suffer, rise and fall in the whirlwind battle of life itself. world of make- est all of us at st turn to the life itself. es of astounding $24,000 in Prizes Each year True Story Magazine pays thou- sands of dollars for true stories. Inyourlifethere may be a story for which we arewilling to pay handsomely. Prizes range from $200.00 to $1,000.00 each for true stories of the sort you y Contents The Two Women He Married When the Past Calls Hell's Highway HeWanted Children When Society Sins Stronger Than Pride Inside a Mother’s Heart ary issue contains fu particulars. Iy [} The fraternity house a few months later. A nume ber of men present—all of them restless, bored, worn out by the glamour of wild midnights and the age-old temptations of wine, women and song. Two co-eds are talk- The studious, good-looking youth, his face now white and drawn, gets up to leave. “Where to?""—a fraternity brother inquires. “Who knows — or who cares,” he replies coldly. He goes to hisroom. Presently they hearacrash, then aloud harsh laugh—the laugh of a manwhose soul is sick and screaming. Later they find in his room, amid a litter of shattered glass,—a twisted, broken photograph of one of the most beautiful girls in the univer (vl Just as a spark may grow into a terrible confla- gration, so a single human act may engulf guilty and innocent alike in tragedy. Before many hours havepassed, these hardened, sophisticated, cynical youthsaretostand aghastatthedesperate dramaof violence, terror, shame and utter ruin that followss The whole storyis frankly, fearlessly told, under the title, “Hell's Highway,” in January True Story Magazine. It is an amazing document. No true chronicle ever published weaves such a spell of pity for the thoughtless, pleasure-mad young people of today, nor carries with it such an unforgettable lesson in right living, not only to ur boys and girls, but to parents as well. (Above)—"HOW ABOUT LUNCH?"’—Like thousandsof other movie-mad girls, this reckless but innocent girl, lured irsesistibly by the silver screen, left home and Ioved ones behind and made a daring effort to crash her way to cinema fame. Her own story of her startling ex- perience is thrillingly tald in *Movie Mad,"” January True Story. havetotell. Thelanu, Use the Coupon if No Newsstand Is Convenient MACFADDEN PUBLICATIONS, Izc., 64th Street and Broadway, New York City. 1 wish to become familiar with True Story Magazine. Please enter my name to receive the next five issuzs beginning with the January number. Iam enclosing $1.00 in full payment. (If you prefer to examine the magazine before subscribing, simply mail us 25 cents, and we will send you one copy of the January issue atonce.) Address. . SEALEmresmmremne City- l—————_——-—-—————— THE LARGEST NEWSSTAND SALE IN THE WORLD~TWO MILLION MONTHLY