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RFTAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1988 1SSUES Revealed by Postmaster’s Charts| OF 1928 CAMPAIGN| [21: Yomrs Cirb lbormed o0 Thes Disappesss Another Ciwe 0 Ideatity of Slayer of Botty Cham- bers in Chicago. Chicago, Jen. 13 M—Dorls Kirk's ts, upon which pelice sought to connect her with the Betty have . I, 1938 the a_pepulation of 100, Reports of Russia's Action Coz- llmfl_lnm peace, amined by an alienist, l Moscow, Jan. 18 (M—(Delayed)— Stanley Welles decided at a session 'All eppositionary leaders of every of the court last night in the town shade and chairacter have been or- hall. During the past three or four dered to leave Moscow and to pro- years, Evanovich has been brought ceed to various distant points where | into court on many counts, includ- they must remain for indefinite ing breach of the peace, assault and periods. battery, and drunkenness. His last | In administering punishment, the appearance brought a jail sentence | oppositionaries were divided into of 20 days but Judge Molloy releas- e incorrigibles, thres groups—th ed him after part of the term " a8 | penitents and ,‘“.unn,”u. over. Conatable Raymond V. H-llenu,Rf:““:;'m"“’;mn"; “':‘_’ arrested Evanovich after the last| ... 'ivo councils of SBoviet Kuash, the peace on Decembe: | 8 :’;“?:.d:‘e Wil ioeided that since Christian Rakovaky, former Soviet a little liquor makes him act se ‘?::“k‘ B:Lh:lh:‘;'mumll.;.d head | queerly, it would only be falr to the '\, o0l L0 since they abide man to permit’ him to have an ex- | h¢ Bod:penitoait, since by their principles. Their punish- Amination & Jirw z:::_‘:::‘u’n‘x:‘imm 1a therefore inore drastice. an allenist. Should Evanovich be| Rakovaky aod Radek were sent ajudged sane, his case will by (!0 Ust-Sysolsk, a small town far brought into court again. Attorney |POfth in the Komi region bordering Thomas F. McDonough of New Lrit- 98 Arcbangel Province. 1 ain representzd him last night. In fixing 8 place for Trotsky, dif- | —_— ficuities arose on account of his poor A speclal meeting of the school | health, since he is tubercular. Phy- board will be held this evening at | sicians opposed the original pian to it . The petitien of Ella Parsons Korf- mann of 56 Garden street, Hartford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James B Parsons, Sr., of this city, for a-di- vores from Paul Korfmana of Hart- ford, charging that her husband concealed from her the fact that he ‘was an epileptic when she married ' as denled by Judge Waldo » in the superior court yester- it is understood that Mrs. <nn's counsel, Thomas F. Mc-| .51 of this city, will carry the - tn the supreme court of errors __ <2 claim that the question of residence involved is an important one in the determination of future divorce cases, i Mrs. Korfmann was divorced and married in Yucatan within three days. She divorced her first hus-| band, Willlam Lay of ‘Westfield, Mass,, on November 3, 1925, in the city of Merida, Yucatan, after hav-| ing expressed her “volition” to do so. Three days later, November 6, while “in transit” she married Korfmann in the same city. Her marriage cer- tificate describes marriage as ‘“the no fingerpria This development, faverable to the zl i = Father John's Medicine Again Proves Its Value—For Colds, Coughs and Body Bailding “We use Fath. er John's Med- icine with great success continu- ally in our home" ;| writes Miss Helen ¥ 'Boles of 1034 Fourth St. Min. neapolis, Minn., in a recent letter. For colds and as a preventive of the more serious i |an opportunity to place a bigamy !charge against him. Apparent collapse of the fnger- print evidence has given impetus to the police search for the slain we- man's husband, Gordon Chambers, | with whom she quarreled a few days | before her death. ‘CAL’ AND ‘LINDY il f the people wherever 0 putting Central the map, and Central ica il willing to give to business i {HHHEH] : i for republics. Mra. Payne at- e “Lindbergh Luck" one- 00d {ofluq: but nine- his infinite* capacity for palns. i g% voluntary union of a man and a woman, based upon love—dissoluble through the medium of divorce.” The petitioner, a tall blonde in her early thirties, testified, and in- troduced supporting evidence that her husband was frequently subject to fits of epilepsy, which had a bad effect on her health. Judge Marvin wrote no memoran- dum of dectsion in denying the peti- tion, although he commented on the case. He declined to comment on the legality of a Yucatan divorce as a general question and made clear that he was avoiding the question entirely. He gave his r:‘[;m“ for ng the petition, as follows: dc'!!ly: s‘eems to the court that if the parties to this marriage had a resi- dence in Yucatan in November 1925 such as would give the courts of that republic jurisdiction of the case, that regidence must have interrupted her continuous residence in Connecticut 50 that she cannot show a continu- ous residence here of three years which our law requires.” Asked to comment on the legality of the Yucatan divorce in this case, Judge Marvin said: “Qur supreme court and the courts of this state have insisted that while a certain amount of credit is to be given to the judicial proceedings of another state or country, it must be shown that the court in Which those ings were had, acquired some jurisdiction of the parties either by residence or by actual notice to the defendant. This was not shown ‘Without offering any comment for publication, Judge Marvin called at-. tention to the basis of the Yucatan marriage of the Korfmanns, as it is recited in the marriage certificate: “Marriage {8 the voluntary union of & man and woman based upon love, for the formation of home, dis- soluble through the medium of di- vorce, which can be decreed upon petition of both spouses, or of only one of them; that the man and the woman are bound to maintain mu- tual consideration and affection for each other; that the state intrusts the education of their children to them, therefore it is their duty to educate and love them, making of them law-abiding citizens.” NEWINGTON VOTERS NEET ON JAN. % Special Assembly Called to Act on Pressing Matters Newington, Jan. 18—According to an annot ement made last night by First Selectman James C: Gilbert. a special town meeting will be held in the Grange hall Wednesday eve- ning, January 25. This date was originally set as the time for the annual meeting of the Maple Hill fire district. 1t has been arranged, however, to have the town meeting on that night since it is the only date when the Grange hall is avail- able, * The question of purchasing fire hose for the Newington Volunteer fire department will be discussed and voted upon. The practicability of engaging a visitirg nurse will also be discussed. The school matter will not come up before this meeting. The finance board has decided to hold another meeting before bring- ing the mattor before the voters. Members of the board will endeavor to obtain miore information in regard to the erection of a high school univ and it possible some definite plans to present to the voters. The date for the annual meeting of the Maple Hill fire dis has Pain gone at atouch | That'showinswntisyourrelief from ‘esrapain whenyouepply Dr.Scholi’s It's the world’s fastest, oufest method. They remove the eape9=friction and pressure of ‘shosp=the ealy method thatactson thisgalentific principle. Old ways— liquidsorcaustic plasters—= igmtre the casse—often leave the 1088 v from acid burn. Zino-pads wam'tirritate the tenderert skin. At ol dmug, shoe and dept. stores~35¢. ) Scholl’s ino-pa Pt omg on —ths pein is gone! the Center achool at 7:30 o'clock. A meeting of the Ladies Ald 8o- clety of the Newington Congrega tional church was held this after- roon st the parish house at 2:30 o'clock. A food sale was held in | connection with the meeting. The condition of Miss Alice Gil- bert, daughtar of First Selectman and Mrs. James C. Gilbert, is stead- ily improving. Miss Gilbert suffered a broken collar bone and bruises when struck by an automobile in | tront of her home about two weeks ago. CHODSENORTHWEST FOR GARBAGE DOWP Majority of Bidders for City Gontract Have Sites Picked | With one exception, bidders for a | contract to collect garbage next year |plan to dispose of it in the mnorth- western section of the city, a prac- tice which has been the basis for inumerous complaints to the health department in the past. Present and prospective collectors were before the health commission. ers yesterday afternoon to discuss to plow the garbage into the soll (while others will conduct hog and | chicken farms, they told the board. One of the bidders is a policeman, {Cyrua F. Schoonmaker. He seeks a |contract for the second district and | his bid is $9,500, the lowest for that part of the city. He has permission to dump the garbage on the property of Albin Swanson. Swanson is in the competition for the first district and will use the same land, which is on Farmington avenue near the town line. Bwan- son’s brother, John, has bid for the second district. He is working at present for Albin 8wanson. Hjalmer Nyquist, formerly employed by Swanson, is a competitor of his for- mer employer. He has adjoining land on which he will unload the garbage if given a contract, Hrubic & Jaronko offerea to sign. contracts for the first two districts and if the city accepted they would conduct a hog farm on Slater road, beginning with 100 hogs and In- creasing their stock to $1,000 if nec- essary. Leon Liegey proposed to dispese of the garbage collected throughout the city on his 250 acre tract in Rocky Hill. His bid was $50,000 a year. Louis 8. Schmidt has an 86-acre |tract of land on Farmington avenue | which he would use if granted a con- Itract covering the entire city. Answering Dr. R. W. Pullen’s in- quiry as to the likelilhood of protest against the use of the northwestern section of th> city for disposal pur- | poses, Eugene Manyone, one of the |bidders, declared he has already | heard one objector to his plan which | provides for use of land on Slater road. | 25 Million Dollar Firm \ To Control Movies Boston, Jan. 18 (UP)—Formation ot a $25,000,000 theatrical corpora- tion, which will control a group of New England movie houses, was an- |nounced here today. The new corporation is an out- growth of the New England Theaters Operating company, which it will control. ! Samuel Pinanski, 34, former Bos- ton theater manager, has | their disposal schemes. Some plan | send him to Astrakhan, while the government opposed the physicians’ suggestion that he be sent to Suc- chuw, Caucasia. Leo B. Kamenoff, once ambamsa- dor to ltaly, and Gregory Zinovieff formerly head of the communist international, head the penitents, baving declared themselves before ENVOES OF PEACE R. 1. Grant Soes Good Will Re- sult From Their Visits the entire party as erring in their views und tactics. Kameneft has been asked to proceed to Pensa, & provincial city in Central Russia, and Zinovieff to Vologda. Both have been assigned to jobs in the state education departments and will re- main until the central committes sees fit to restore them to their rights, The incorrigibles, headed by M. Sapronoff, former secretary of the | central executive committee, recelv- ed more serious punishment. The Sapronoff group was sent to various | points in the remotest regions of | Biberia. on Way Berlin, Jan. 18 (UP) — Leon Trotzky, erstwhile co-dictator of the Russian empire, was on his way to- |day to lonely banishment on the |Chinese frontier of Turkestan, said | s Berliner Tageblatt Moscow dis- pateh. The Tageblatt's usually well-in- | formed Moscow correspondent de- clared that Trotsky, shorn of all power, left Monday night to take |an obscure goveramental post at Vierny. His feparture meant that thel government had been able to force | him to take the punishment meted out to him for opposing the now {dominant Stalin faction. Before Trotsky left Moscow, the Tageblatt correspondent reported obtaining an interview with him. “The revolutionary tide has been ebbing since 1922 Trotzky was quoted as saying. “But it will rise again. The spring elections in vari- ous European countries will show a drift toward radicalism. At first the socialists will benefit. But they will not be able to stem the tide, which finally will flow over them toward communism, “It is strange now to think thav Lloyd George predicted for me a Napoleonic future.” Trotzky was said to have declared that political developments in Eu- rope depended largely on the United States attitude, Westport Boy Drowned By Falling Into Pond Westport, Jan. 183 (M—Aldens pond topight gave up the body of little S-year-old Edward London #on of Mr. and Mra. James London of Washington avenue. More than | 200 searchers bad sought the lad ' since late afternoon, examining new | and vacant dwellings, parked auto- mobiles and other places into which he might have gone when he tired of walkin, It was a pitiful homecoming for the mother Who had dressed the lit- tle boly warmly and sent him into the yard to play with the injunction that he was not to wander far from home. She had gone to visit friends for the afternoon and did not know of the boy’s disappearance until her return in the evening, after firemen 2nd policeman had joined the acores | of neighbors who had taken up the | scarch which ended so sadly. The body was underneath the ice, the boy evidently having wandered to the pond. “The visits of Lindbergh to the different nations of the world and Coolidge's visit to Havana are the types of deeds that create friendly feeling between nations and elimin- ate wars,” declared R. T. Grant at the meeting of the Exchange club last evening. The speaker was in- troduced by Russell 8 Gold. He spoke in part as follows: “The people should never forget Armistice day when the most bitter war ever known was brought to & @lose, & war started by an insane monarch and backed up by nations gone mad. Already different states- men around the world are talking of the next war. If they would stop to nsider the countless dead who lie in\Flanders fields and the terrible consequences that would result from another war friendly feeling between the nations of the world would be more sought after. Love stands above the most devastating results of war, Love is unlimited and pro- duces faith. Faith will help to keep this world free from future wars. Nations cannot progress without love and faith, If the nations are in- telligent, they will promote love and friendly feelings. “We must learn to think of the word foreigner as a descriptive ex- pression and not an adjective. Noth- ing can bring nations into closer contact than the good will trips such as those of Coolidge to Havana and the great Lindbergh to the countries of the world. Love and faith will prevent another war, for the next war will be the great day of God's indignation.” Mr. Clark used many quotations from the Bible and various authors to emphasize his remarks. After the meeting the members of the club and their wives attended the Lions Frolle. ATTEMPT ON LIFE OF PRINCE IS REPORTED imstaylmm.nluau. erally Known in Belglan Capital London, Jan. 18 (UP)—An at- tempt on the life of Prince Leopold of Belgium occurred Tuesday in an explosion in a room of Bellevue Pa- lace where the Prince was working, a Brussells dispatch to the Dally Chronicle said today. The Prince was uninjured but the windows of the room were shattered. The dispatch sald the explosion was believed due to bombs placed in fire dogs at one end of the room. Brussels, Jan. 18 (UP)—Attend- ants at both the royal palace and Bellevue Palace today maintained ig- norance of an explosion said to have occurred in a room in the Bellevye Palace in which Prince Leopold was working. The explosion was reported here in the newspaper Dernier Heure, which said a copper ball adorning andirons that dated back to the time of Leopold the second, had exploded causing considerable damage in the room. It was known that Leopold had not been injured as he attended a public function at a time after the New Haven Restaurant Closed by Corrt Order New Haven, Jan. 18 UM—A tem- porary injunction granted by Judg> Edwin 8. Thomas of the United been grates district court and closing the | reported explosion. Officials of the royal palace de- nied to the United Press that the | Bellevue Palace explosion had a 'criminal motive. They declared such statements to be ridiculous. Kind Albert, they sald, was angry |named president of the corporation, go.y,its restauraat at 263 South Wa- At reports that there had been an !which will have an adthorized capi- tal of $15,000,000 first preferred ter street yesterday when papers were served by a deputy marshal attempt at assasination. [stock, $10,000,000 second preferred oy ator removed when counsel for Erstwhile Friends Are [stock, and 10,000 shares of common stock. | Preferred and common stock rep- | resenting $2,000,000 will be issued to {acquire the holdings of those inter- lested in the new organization. Military Training to | Hzln Students at Yale New Haven, Jan. 18 (P—Men at- tending citizen's military training tsburg and Camp Dev- ens, who have fully qualified for ad- mission to Yale University, will be entitied to eompetition for a free scholarship it was anonunced here | by _university officials today. | This schola lable to the winner George De Phil'ppo, propritor, en- tered a motion for medification of the temporary injunction. The de- fendant’s motian was sustained by Judge Thomas. The bill of complaint | filed against |owner by the United States contends | that intoxicating liquor is #old in the place and that it I8 a “common nuisance.” Headache? { = Instesd of Eanperous heart dcpres. ! rants take safe, mild and 7 ly vegetablo ! ReSTRE and g | | arademic years on the basix of high | | scholastic record | finaneial need. I'ghip will bo of and evidence of A similar scholar- red in 19 25 and first competition took place in 1927 1t 18 now held by Hamiiton Crane Fastman, a mem- ber of tke froechman class from Springfield, Mass. the Bo-lite and its | Opposed in Woman’s Fight New York, Jan. 18 (P—Miss {Anne Morgan and Miss Gertrude Robirson Smith, friends of long |standing and next door neighbors, {today were ranged on opposite sides {in factional diffcrences that have de- ,veloped in the American Woman's | association over policies in connec- tion with club house. Miss 8mjth, president of the asso- clation since its formation six years ago, has resigned, and said her ac- tion would be followed by the resig- nations of seven of the association's 25 directors and six members of its membership committee. Miss Morgan, also identified with |the organization einee fts inccption by Miss Smith to head the its projected $8,000,000 | policies she disapproves, has been named as chairman of the associa- tion's exccutive committee, ty faction of the board, whose BUILDING vance was slightly over that of the actusl advance. The figures for 1920 show about 7,600 while the ex- pected advance was about 9,000. The line swings around to where in 1926 the expected advance and the actual advance meet in the vicinity | of 11,000 to 11,500. The expected increase from that point to 1927 . predicts 15,000 for that year. In postal receipts the actual ad- vance, has followed more closely the expected advance, falling off slightly alLHEHTRIN between 1918 and 1920, coming up {sharply in 1920, making a sharp drop in the following year and com- ing up rapidly until it reached the predicted advance line in 1923. The receipts according to the chart were $100,000 in 1910 to $400,000 in 1927, with a predicted $600,000 or more at the same rate of increase in 1935 to 26. The actual advance in population falls considerably below the expected advance, . according to the third chart, Starting with 45,000 in 1910 |the expected advance shows between 65,000 and 70,000 i 1920, whereas the actual population was between 50,000 and 60,000, The lines con- verge to 1927 where they show a LOST TRIBE OF INDIANS Smithsonian Institution Party Look- ing for Traces of Calusa in Florida, ‘Washington, Jan. 18.—(P—Hope |of uncovering traces of a “lost” tribe of Indians, the Calusa, which | disappeared about 100 years ago aft- er having played a dominant part in the history of Southern Florida for |more than three centuries, is tak- ing a Smithsonian institutién expedi- tion under Hery B. Collins, Jr, to that state to excavate mnewly dis- covered mounds. An account of a battle in 1513 in {which 80 canoes filled with Calusa | braves attacked Ponce De Leon and prevented him from landing his forces along their coast is history’s |earliest mention of the tribe. Rec- quired prodigious wealth in gold which it secured from Spanish gal- leons wrecked off the coast while returning to 8pain with the treasures of the Incas. The Calusas were known to have Molasses is one of the substances made human sacrifice of their cap- from which niotor aicohol has been |tives. scalped and dismembered the derived. |bodies of their slain enemies, and SOUGHT BY EXPEDITION | 'ords disclose that later the tribe ac- ' INCREASE “A study of these charts shows a remarkable similarity of advance in the three fields covered, showing our growth is healthy, and that reason- able estimates of future growth may reached. '‘Owing to the late fssuance of th directory, the population for' 1937 cannot be accurately prognosticated until the book appears, but the line | would indicate a probable $1,800 for 11927, and this is supported by the POSTAL RECEIPT INCREASE following facts. “The school enroliment for 1927 showed a large increase. “The personal tax list showed an increase over 1926. “Postal surveys show an increase. “New telephone book shows a slight increase. “On the other hand, factory en- rollment is less than last year, but the number of workers living here, but employed in nearby communi- ties, has increased and the faotory loss apparently absorbed.” In addition to Mr. Erwin's inform- ation, given above, the telephone eompany reports an increase of 407 telephones, of which 296 are in private residences. . BAITAIN'S TORLITION @Oy wnaLr e have often been accuscd of canni- balism. About 100 years ago all traces of of the tribe disappeared although it has been suggested that it might have been represented in & tribe of so-called “Choctaw Indians” whe in- hablited Filorida as late as 1847, Theories that the tribe might have fled to Cuba before the ad- vance of the white men or that it | was assimilated by the Seminoles | have been advanced by historians. In the quarter ending September 30, 1927, 83,947 boy babies and 89, 062 girl bables were born in Eng- land and Wales. How Often Should | Bobbed Hair be Shampooed? As often as a man's, say suthorities, that 11, about once a week. Use a good s03p to banish germs with the dirt— . the pine tar 1n Packer's Tar Soap (the standard shampoo soap for 5§ years) is antiseptic. Use two latherings and rinse with kot water. Mas- sage, too, is helpful. You can get Packer's i Packer's at any guod drg oc depert of estimate on the population chart o outlook for 1928 is uncer- tain since a presidential year always leads to caution in business as nine- tenths of buainess i3 done on credit or confidence. The republicans now in power stand on the issue of pros- perity—claims of a continued and increasing prosperity in spite of the soft coal strike, the Mississippi flood and the withdrawal of Ford from the automobile industry for a time, The democratg eay that pros- perity is the natural progress of af. fairs bound to follow after war, no matter which party was in power. The outstanding figure for demo- cratic nomination is Alfred Em- manuel 8mith, the speaker said. The republicans say that he is a product of Tammany hall, that he is a Roman Catholic, and that he is not only very damp, but exceedingly wet. Governor Smith has come before the public eye in his message to the state legislature, setting forth the policies of the &gmocratic party and stating what he has accomplished, and the public has watched him in his refusal to give stay of execution to Ruth 8nyder and Henry Gray, she pointed out. Some republicans are booming Herbert Hoover. Continuing, the speaker said. “Looking backward over Europe in 1927 we find her great problem one of economics. 8he has gained a better understanding of war repara- tions and war debts. The little coun- tries are on a better financial basis, and the large new nations are now able to get loans to promote stability and expansion, which shows as- surance of good financial status. Italy s on a basis where she can feel she is on a sure foundation, The only large mnation not having her currecy stabilized {s France. But France's borrowing capacity from the Bank of France is now seven billions, dye to the efforts of Poin- care who persisted where eight min- isters had failed. France began to return in two months and her peo- ple gained confidence knowing that their money would work for them doubly at home, He retired part of the America debt by buying the 8Swedish Match Co. at 6 per cent. Last year he collected 33,000,000,000 | francs in taxes, “The conference of the Pan- American Union at Havana isa most | important event. This s ita sixth. conference. It {s headed by Secretary of Btate Charles E. Hughes, who has | Bone as a delegate with elght others from the United Statea, The presence of President Coolidge is significant. Only four other presidents while in office have ever left our native soil— Roosevelt, when he visited Panama; Taft, when he went to Mexico; Wil- #on, when he crossed to Europe twice, and Harding when he passed through Cangda on his way to Alaska. Cuba has been more en- thusiastic in acclalming our dele- gates than it has ever been over any forelgn potentate. The Pan-Ameri- can spirit is the result not of treaties, but of the will of the people. Cool- idge in his speech Monday set the keynote for sympathy. He created an atmosphere of good-will for there are many very delicate and difficult problems to be decided upon at the conference. Our policies must be clearly understood. It is not our de- sign to impress those countries south of us but to cooperate and ‘work with them fn friendliness. We have five billion dollars invested in Pan-America and only four billion in Europe. Every dollar must be either & menace or a promise.” PROBABLY SUICIDE Bridgeport, Jan. 18° u..—Found 4A4 in a gas filled room in the attic of his rooming house at 155 Colo- rado avenue early yesterday after- noon, Otto Nelson, §8, apparently committed suicide, but pending an investigation being made by police department officlals, Medical Exam- iner H. K. Deluca had arrived at no decision tonight. Beveral urusual circumstances are being probed, ailments which so often develop from the colds Father John's Medicine has come to be the standard home medicine in countless homes, For over 70 years this medicine has proved fts value and it is worth knowing that there is absolutely 10 alcohol nor nerve deadening drugs of any kind in any form in Father John's Medicine, AVCID UGLY FIMPLES A pimply face will not embarrass you much longer if you get a pack- age of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, bowels and live er with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the successful substitute for calo- mel; there's no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and just as ef- fectively, but their action is gentle {and safe instead of severe and firri- | tating. No one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with a ‘*“dark brown taste,” a bad breath, a dull, listless, “no good” feeling, constipation, tor- pid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. Olive Tablets are a purely vege- table compound mixed with olive | 0il; know them by their olive color. Dr.Edwards spent years among-pa- tients afflicted with liver and bowel complaints and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Taken nightly for a week. See how much better you feel and look. 1dc, 30c end 60c. | e me— |= — | v:es v Twice .as Beautiful In a few minutes time, your hair is soft, silky and radiant with life, gloss and lustre. To have beautiful, fresh looking hair is simply a matter of proper shampooing. While your hair must have fre- quent and regular wasling to keep it beautiful, it cannot stand the harsh effect of ordinary soaps. The free alkali in ordinary soaps soon dries the scalp, makes the hair brit- tle and ruins it. i ‘That s why discriminating wom- en, everywhere, now use Mulsified Cog¢oanut Ofl Shampoo. This clear, pure and entirely greaseless product brings out all the real beauty of the hair and cannot possibly injure, Two or three teaspoonfuls of Mul- sified is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather which cleanses thoroughly and rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. It leaves the hair soft, silky and easy to manage and makes it fairly sparkle with new life, gloss and lustre. You can get Mulsified Cocoanut Ofl Shampoo at any drug store. A four-ounce bottle lasts for months. A charming Gruen Cartouche Hu!ilnmbvfluhzmdlmezm to appraise it! A thoroughly dependable movement in a dainty, L gold case, engraved in antique reinforced finish. See this and other style-leading Gruen Guild Watches at our store —today. Prices range from $25 to $500 — some set with diamonds as low as $60. (he Porter & Jewelers and 54 Main St. Dyson Co. Silversmiths New Britain