New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 30, 1928, Page 17

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T streets of Moscow or Kharkov or with which hér contemporaries of | |Tiflis with an independence and | the working Riverina, jall things considered, she is happy |are of course numerous | graduations. whose memory of 19 1 is dim, Is to be found in the technical|and who find life n little Jess hard Moscow, March 80 (UP)—The |5Cho0ls, in the political gatherings, [and less carnest than their some- North Platte, Neb., Mar. 30. () — | Ensland. even in t military acadamic N ] way to insult a Russian flapper, cur | what elde rent model, is to treat her like a sisters. These, together | doing and preparing to do what out- The'site of Fort McPherson will be | girl. [side the Sovict domains is consid-ithose responsible for Russia's| 1°Signated by a stone marker. Show gallantry, give her a seat in | €0 “man's \'\‘urh destinies that the flapper needs a | l'unds for it have been coutributed | buptisms and , the tram, imply in any other way| ‘While the Russian flapper, is im-|modicum of idcalism and sentiment | ly citizens of Lincoln County, who | dashing off that she is of a weaker and more | MENSElY interested in things of the |y ance her, may soon work real | ope impetus will be given to com- | next servies precious sex and instantly she is up | 2ind: she does not either in 100Ks | changes in the Russian girl memorating other historic spots in | { \ ‘ in arms. Such “bourgcols senti- O behavior conform to the tradi-\ Afrcady she is a problem to her | this section which mark the ! i f ! i mentalities” she declares, are for|tonal conception of an intellectual | oge the pampered daughters of the capi- {girl. Spectacles and pasty COM- {1y come into the picture ut all, but ta | yond the Rockies, Lloyd € jaunty man's cap over her clipped [ DUt Ber checks are’ruddy and on | eygsed. The flappers themselves, in | since been abandoned and the land hair, @ heuvy overcoat and felt |Sundays she is out skiing or swim-!ruct, join in these discussiong. constituting the rescrvation all has boots. She puffs cigarettes and |Ming With the Loys. She is i mem- reverted to private ownership save mixes with the boys as an equal.|Der of an “aviation and chemical| poyq A LN WEDDINGS | 20 acres retained by the govern- 3 ¥urs and fripperies, even if she|clrele” where she goes in fori Neuvy.sy \geon, Yrance, | ment for cemetery purposcs. Road could afford them, are not in her sharpshooting and gymnasties and zar 3o, P—Eizht golden wed. | improvements arc projected 1hat line. indulgences would | 50Co ! ding anniversarics were colebrated | will bring the old fort site and the merely hamper her large free stride | Naturally, - she is not the ovly|yere on the same day and most of | national cemetery within y ac- I in a busy life as “comsomol— | type of flapper. But being the one|ine 3,008 inhabitants of the tewn cess from the Lincoln Hi v 3 young communist—as trade-union | Most in the public | found themselves in the family par- | The marker may serve to indicate { worker, as serfous student. {rades and - micetin | ties, often by relationship to several the line of the old Californin Trail This girl was 10 years old or m‘: gatherings, she may be taken as the piirs of colebrants. The 16 princi- @t its intersection of the public ‘ when the Bolshevik revolution took | standurd. l,n.ls averaged 76 years of uge. road south of the ce vy and ' P place, $he grew to maturity quick-| There is another type, onc that west of the fort aite, ly In & perlod of clvil strife, inter- | in HH»‘m rather shrinks o I'\'”" Several patriotic socictics have vention, famine and intensive re- | lic scrutin is onc is usually c‘ll [ petitioned ~ for a government construction. She saw women, | daughter of a despised busin ] Ollles memorial at the Nauonafn h.u'(r,:',' % members of her immediate family | ("nepman’), wears near. Quick, safa, sure elief from where are buried the remains of perhaps, fight in the front trenches| clothes, very carmine lips and an Ppainful callouses on the feet. 1,112 soldiers and pioneer men, wo- and lead cavalry charges. She|oxotic coiffurc. In a few almost | At drug, shoe and depr. stores 35¢ | men and children, white and In- : watched them join the men as clandestine dance-hally she does an | dians. Of the number, 517 arc . Judges and administrators in a new | imitation Charleston to tunes of | m d Putenson—ihe | classed as unknown. the flotsam * ruthleas government, or in the: fields | ancient vintage. And she dreams of | 'E $ peinisame T of the stream of human- DopGe BROTHERS | cAnnounce | A DASHING COMPANION TO THE BRILLIANT VICTORY | AND SENIOR SIXES « < NDARD SIX | Q75 7.0.8. ROIY THE FASTEST AND FINEST ! PERFORMER UNDER $10600 ST. Here is the fastest car under a thousand dollars! .+« « With the fastest acceleration of any car : | under a thousand dollars! . . . . And the greatest flexibility! And the greatest motor! And the STANDARD SIX highest ratio of power to pounds! STANDARD SIX ! SUPERIORITIES The Coupe In fact, the basic secret of Standard Six perform- ‘875 ance is the car’s extraordinary ratio of power to ankshalte Lig l weight . . . . 1horsepower to every 47 pounds! pistana : i The ¢-door Sedan .+ + . And built to supply this tremendous power “m'.'..’ ed o ‘ ‘ 3895 safely and dependably. presid Al {ull-prossare "e: haust - heat. The Cabrioles In other words, a car of remarkable ruggedness, f;"r::t:-:;-}:-:f:fl_-_r-‘m; designed and balanced to accommodate the most iy y ‘945 spectacular engine ever provided in & Six of low | grs o) price. . . . Fit companion to Dodge Brothers Ty Dslacwe Soden brilliant Senior and Victory Sixes! .970 Big, roomy, comfortable . . . . Beautifully de- signed and lacquered in a variety of smart and enduring colors . . . . Midland internal expand- VICTORY SIX ing steeldraulic four:wheel brakes, and complete #1045 to #1170 | cquipment. SENIOR SIX A Six that you can buy with a remarkably small $1570 to $1770 down payment and drive for years with . Allprices . 0. b. Detrsit pride and satisfaction. s So astonishing a performer that your immediate investigation is more than warranted! On display throughout America today. 14 #toel chasais springe Clesr Vision Bodies = Handeo. S. & F. MOTOR SALES CO. © 1129 Stanley Street - Tel. 731 : NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1928. |und factories in the cffort to re-|marrying some onc who will give her | ity that pourcd turough the Platte 1 build a shattered cconomy. {a trip abroad, a foreigner, let us say, | j\'n"t-y in the carly days. » | Therc was no room for softness|or even a commissar. In present-day | ! 1 lor gallantry in this period. Only| Russia, she feels, her charmis and | | Australi | @urage, brawn, hard facts count-|coquetries are wasted. Maybe, too, ' lAu“mhm! Be.com?s . led. So now she strides along the'she is hurt by the pitiless disdain { Genuine Sky Pilot e — e STILL IN FORCE . - the young com- | | Australia, Mar. 30. P —Rev. self-assurance equaled by ther | somols, trea ind. | Daniels finds nis hew airplane * Afld F“nhery lS PI‘OIld 0! Her;"““ “"3"“1‘ : (;'I““"'L “’)Or;‘d‘«‘ o"x‘;‘; w‘l‘;:.nu.lfrfitlalu ‘}::d classes there ‘Plan Tablet Whel‘e FOl‘[ MC‘,\\':::O’.IHI\‘;N; :‘::m “uo‘:‘\r\r: n‘l’“m for - Framingham, Mass., Remains i covering his parish in the Pesy Ab'“ . \in a conviction that life holds hard | Young girls are fast blossoming out 0 S 00{] !river country than the old motor | b \ W A [but important work for her. She Pherso“ g8 | car which he formerly Biggest Democracy .00 ael | district is as large as the whole of i or Danicls enjoys | with a growing conviction on part of jlanding dpsbush ing brief serviee clearings and shyward for his|jaq AGED SI. —not her parents, who scarce- | ry's forward thrust inte and be- | Mount Saler ¢ negro slave i | petition the at the age of irter, body of voters who o i talist countries, not for the ,.»lurd,-h*' yions are not for her. She may|(he responxible communist leaders, In 1868, when the terminus of the Kentucky, post-revolutionary generation of “]\-"' uss avidly the Leninist duty ‘“‘ Looks satirizing the mannishne Union Pacific railread was at North 104, He escaped to Canada in 1842, females in the Soviet Union. jdlectrify the country or the pros-iung jack @f sentimentality of the | Platte, Fort McPherson was an im- A The Russtan flapper wears a |PUC'S of an Anglo-American war | flapher are being written and dis. | portant military post, but it has n d cooperation | should be between the various tewn departments, 4 inment of | While there jis ample provision t cr small, in the | for all voters (o register their vetey . the old- the polls, the 7,500 voters of the n any larger than con- gress, | n any ioned New for the pe f €ov- | town cannot all crowd into the ipig~ people, [ gest hall in town at one time, -Be- people’— | fore town ineeting it was felt that | seutiment was “pretty strong” for roposal to pegition for a eit For six listen to | ¢l e govern- | he . on®ai last night, 8 premis “nt citizen arose and stoutly de- 1 nded the ancieng democratic L1 pproval 1o/ tem and warned against choosing (another. And his fellow citigens hjvoted down the proposal for a ge of government by an overe | whelming majoryty. nake su T this community of 23 BOOSTEKRS BOOM BERLIN Berlingk March 30— Evegybedy . once in Berlin” is the slogan ©f the it rlin Boosters, who effer a, three- sightseeing visit to the vity for, i proposal t Building Big Volume By Giving Big Values out to capture popular approval bY blazing a new trail for men’s clothes at the lowest pos- sible prices at which quality clothes can besold. We cut our profits—increased our production— reduced our overhead—standardized our value and brought prices down to 2 sensible level. HE tremendous enthusiasm which greeted our Spring showing was almost a fore- gone conclusion. We deliberately set And the reason we can give you better values is betause the 40 PsQ Shops are a big modern institution established on the proven principle — I--That volume can more than offset small profifs. 2--That it is possible to do busi- ness in millions on the profils of pennies. 3--That real value giving is the best method of winnirf and keep- ing cuslomers satisfie Come in and see for yourself and go back to the good old fashioned habit of low prices for high quality clothes. man who has been paying $50 6860 to his tailor 40 PerdQ SHOPS FROM MAINE TO MICHIGAN

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