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| i p ; - - convertion of the United Mine 3 other vehicles. SCHOOLS CLOSE FOR EASTER 'day noon at the time when public the Polish profesional men and CuAl MINE B | Workers should be organized on the w T AIN “‘“t 0‘ P.t‘““ l“lld < | Irving L. Mann, doing busincss as Bt. Mary's, St. Joseph's, and the | schools are being dismissed, it was college graduates to o .‘Po- !same principles, the conferecs urg- | To Connecticut People| tr yann 1aboratorice. Bridgeport. Sacred Heart paroeniay woheols ohe reanise {learned today. - Schools will reopen ¥ Patents issued ' by the U. 8. Pat- | Depilatories. lish University club. Plans te get |together and discuss the matter {have been completed and a meeting (List compiled weekly from the robe rails, ete. A movement is on foot An.onglwm be called soon. parochial school will close on Thurs- Official Gazette by the ortice 'of | |ed. 5 | discontinue sessions of school Wed- | on Monday, April 16. 1 1 ent Oftice. March 27, 1928, to Con-! North and Judd Mfg. Co. New |nesday noon of this week for the H | neeticut juventors. | Britain. Catches, handles for hoods, | Easter vacation and St. Matthew's POLISH UNIVERSITY CLUB i Ohio Strke Was a Yor O Yestenday — Chicago, April 2 D —Whether | bituminous coal mining in Illinois | nd Iowa is to be an open or claud[ proposition rested today with in. . dividual mine owners and the! uiners themselves. | In Ohio the breach between winers and operators remained as | “wide as ever, with the striking work- | 's in some places, preparing to| wild barracks to house families | uade homeless by evietions, At Pittsburgh a “Save the Miners' {'nion” econference scored John L. 1.ewis, president of the United Mine | Workers for “betraying the miners,” | 14 urged his removal from oftice. Year Ol The Ohio strike, affecting 46,000 ' siners and 800 mines, was a year | cld yesterd Tilinois and Ohlo | wines, after vear, had been working on a temporary agreement while unfon | l'uders and operators sought to| vome 10 a wage accord. Both sides | remaining adamant—the miners in- | <isting on continuance of the Jack- <onville scale, the operators refusing 10 pay {t—relations were definitely roken down last week, the opera. tors being given permission by thelr issociation to take whatever indi- vidual action they desired. The | mporary agreement ended yester- | ither side conld say how the collapse of negotiations would effect mine operations: They awaited re- porta from the mine fields on the wumber of shafts operating today. | Operators said therc would be only ! 2 few, The union was morc hope- L . Mined coal sufficient for several menths ordinary needs was reported | to be on hand. The nearncss of | warm weathee served further to | take the sting out of the situation. | Mundreds of mine workers have ! oved from the southern Tllinois stricts, seeking employment in other industei Call Mceting A meeting of union chiefs in Tli- ' BUY IN BLOOMFIELD Nebraska Town Goes on “No| Trust” Policy Bloomfield, Neb., April 2 (UP)—, “Cash only" bécame the keynote of | business in Bloomficld, a town of | 1,600 people, today. More than 30 merchants and pro- | fessional men, who have been lis- tening to *“‘charge it"—and waxing poor thereby—ever since entering | business here, have decided that credit is a bad thing. They have undertaken in a therough manner the task of establishing the first “‘cash™ town in the country, 1 Two montha ago the town of Plainview, Neb., miles south of Bloomficld and only slightly small- ammer- idleness | er. attempted a similar experiment, | Tuesday, April has been post- ine. er-long idleness which still iz progressing with un- certainty as to its outcome, But in Painview only the four - leading | stores, doing perhaps half of the ! town's toral Lusiness, cntered into the agreement to discontinue charge agcounts, The understanding by | which the change was effected was a | “gentleman’s agreement” and it has| been whispered since that two of the | stores have relented considerably in | thelr agreement in order to attract ! “ehoice™ customers, | In Bloomficld there will he no | half-way policy. The merchants | have organized and bound them-' selves firmly together. A fine of §100 |—to be turned over to the associa- ! tion—is to be the penalty for the first item charged by a member. Future punishment will be graduat- | od according. Officers heve cstab- | lished a vigilance committee to that the edicts of the association arv obeyed to the letter, The Bloomfield experiment is said by those in close touch with the sit- uation o have been' caused 1 increase of chain stores. and thei rapid growth in all communitics Some merchants expressed belief that uniess they met the chain store competition in kind they would be |important topics of conversation . : Uarold G. Manpliig, Manning Bros. | 100 Yomlgsm‘s E]I]O] MAP0D: stoe co. 11 Matn st New pre | ain.) i Harry H. Beckanstein, Hartford. efie smw m Hm[om Inlc:l.;:kmg zn;le‘:olnt for fi::r l:\fl Newington, April 2 —— The ehild welfare committee of the Hartford window trim. Woman's club ac hosts to 100 among the children. Josephin W. Bluckman, New Har- en. Trellis. ¢ Robert ‘8. Blair, Stamford. Pre. children from the Newington Homs | Jietion of bullets «nd other projec. for Crippled Children Saturday aft- : ; ernoon at the performance of the ' (‘é’;‘o‘:“fo“,;;‘:"‘“"‘::'A“;:‘.""'.ild.':h:; marionette show. “Jack and the | &} % & Beanstalk,” at the clubhous.. The O+ Bridgeport. Electric welding of show' was sponsored by the com. °17 Podies. mities. ang r"‘r,;.,‘,,,h of the affair _ Waltsr' Buswell, Bridgepart. as. will be given to the home. Reports, Si§nor to Standard Compositor Ak- from the home state that the ehilw"""“”““h"" ‘?1"""‘- ?’”""‘ym dren spent an enjoyable afte noan"f)’f"”‘““‘ And Sline-caming{im- | Andiuhie Btow Jstonsiat e imast R S L Waterbury. | Fastener for tire chafne. Hubert Dalton, Stamford. Lathe = | headstock. ! The next mecting of the Newing- | 7 g G, Daniels, Rockford, Til., ay ton League of "Women VOers. gienorito The Bullard Machine Tool which was to have been held onl(o, Bridgeport. Multiple-spindle poned until Tuesday. April 1¢ the home of Mrs. Charles R. mons on Cedar str | lem J. Gagnon, Bridgeport, assignor to The Bead Chain Mfg. | Co. (2 patents). Coupling' for bead chaine. Flavel Elliott returned from Joseph Goodman, Whitneyville, Dartmouth college to spend the assignor to The Mt. Carmel Mfg. Co., Easter recess with his parents, Mr. | Mount Carmel. Door handle, and Mrs. E-A. Elliort of the Center.! Randolph F. Hall, Ithaca, N. Y. | assignor of 25.100 to T. P. Hall, Miss Evelyn Goodale, Jaughter | Wallingford, and 25-100 - to A. E. of Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Goodale of Larsen. Bryn Athyn, Pa. Airplane. | East Robbins avenus, will return| William C. Johnson. Bethe!, as. | to Smith college tomorrow .mr;signur to The Clark Box Co., Dan.-| spending the spring recess in town. | bury. (2 patents). Forming hat-! | Packing ‘rings; and ‘method of and Harry A. Webster in charge | machine for curling hat stays. of the whiste for the month of | Ernest C. Moorhead, Stamford. | April, the first of which will be Apparatus for molding cores. i held in the Grange hall tonight. Christian Pallenberg, Clinton, | signor of 1-2¢t0 E. Pallenberg. - Re- | Willism Camp. son of Mr. andsilient seat mount. Mrs. Norman P. Camp of the Junc-' Howard M. Perkins, Meriden, as. tion. spent the week-end herc signor to Remo Mfg. Co. Laundry- 3 marking pin. | Miss Mildred Goodal, daughter | Howard R. Sargent. Bridgeport, of Mr. and Mrs A. B. Goodale of ASsignor '°]G“"T“ Wieotric Co. AL- | . =t -] from Bos. ldchment-plug-adapter. the e & aed s B SRS AT el e ttsburgh, Pa.: €. M. Steimer, ex- nesville, Ohio, assignor, hy ne assignments, to Hartford-Em- | ton, & she has completed a course at the r Bent Brigham hospital. The Newingion Girls' club is Reasons for Your Confidence All good banking is built on confidence. Your confidence in this bank is justified by its record through more than Two-thirds of a Century, by the high standing of its fifteen Directors, and by its Capital, Surplus and-Undivided Profits of more than Co., Hartrord. Glass-feeding ' mechanism, H Ernest AL Walther, Danbury. Packing cuse for hats Trade-Marks Registered | 10is hag heen called ‘for Thursday. | forced into the hackground, and that completing plans for the presenta- i-ut Harry Fishwick, president of the {py binding themselves together on @ tion of a “A Southern Cin- 1llinois miners, said it offered little cash basis they could prevent the in- gerella,” at the parish house of the liope of a changed status. The nnion Jutside combinations. S cregational chure ‘g itope o1 shanked o e nnle.fl ™ | roads of cutside combination Newington Congr, z“h:mit\ 1;\:1r\}1 Bergen Bros, Auto Tire 0., Hart- | 4 3 on Jelday tevenins. Afrs. Dwight Mloo, 3 snttenios: for. automobiice snd.i 2la saual do_ that provided uuder |l yuay, do Sehmidr, | ot This institution is conservative enough to afford un- he Jacksonville agreement—87 Pollowing are real estate transac- are adv > chub, ar The Bryant Eleetric Co., Bridge- ¥ minimun)ior §1.08 o ton plece: | ijons, yecorded in the town clerk's | aiging i the details ot the plans. porl. Atiachmeni-plug caps and | questioned safety. It is liberal enough to satisfy you. orke ) a L : officc: John J. Madigan. Charles E. i e e The tittsburg) . ferenece, - i hodies nnectore, Ihe Pittsburgh * contercnee. at igan and Mary J. Madigan 10 Tryman Camp, son of Mr. and The Fletcher, Terry Co., Bristol | $1,100,000.00 "l'.']":',‘yl'-"(mfi"'“‘n?:‘:’,:‘:' Kix;‘::::‘ Giovanni Amenta, land and h!hl"l‘l"\lrs orman P. Camp of the Junc- | Glass cutters, Connsylvania, Michigan, West Vin. ("€8 at the corner of Spring and ! fion, will return home on Thursday | inia, Kentueky, Ohio and Indlana, | hion street Llotanm Amenta ‘olm.m New Haven, where he is an cused Lewis of “being in leagne : Nicola Laraia of Newington. samelingtructor at the Callegiate Propa- ih coal operators.” . property: Thomas M. and Emily A. rajory school. SR A Tan L Loty Heayev to Antonio and Concetta il a resolution adopted Berritta, land and tenement ON \fixs Dertha Francis, daughter of Trade-Mark Applicants | conventio i Carmody stre Harry H. Milkowitz | rown Clerk Thomas A. ney Brothers, South Mancles. to Bernard, Rachel and Max Ber-| i)l return Wednesday from Con- | ter. Fabrics in the plece, oo il kowitz, trustee, Ellis strect prop- | nectieut Collr for Women to Duplexalite Diviston of the Miller wlvocated the | <Pty through trustee’s deed. Mar- spend the ¥ cess in town. 0., Meriden, Glass globes and re- | Ning of special district conventions | tin H. Horwitz trustec of bankrupt = = flsctors; (2 applications). | hicl the offices held by Lewis | estate of Johnson & Caxperson. t0 Agricultural courses lasting ten ! Eastern Connecticut Poultry Pro- ! oriers would be declared vacant | the Rogers Sash and Door Co., land days, are to he instituted for farm- i ducers, Inc, Willimantle, Eggs. U new officers “hosen. Tollowing , and bufldings on Shuttle Meadow ' ers in the Provines University of Al Angus D. MacFarlane, Hurtford. * district conventions, the national | avenue, berta, Canada, Electric lamps for automoblles and Liberty Electrjc Corp., Stamford. ctriclty rectifiers, ete, ‘ he Parker Stamp Works., Ine.. Hartford. Preparation for use in the ' i treatment of steels. NEW BRITAIN NATIONAL BANK NEW BRITAI CONNECTICUT The chief points of merit are: The shield is the “signature-guarantee” of the Standard Tool Com- pany that these drills are the most efficient, both mechanically and met- allurgically, yet produced. Red Shield High Speed Dirills are completely represented among the many outstanding products in the mill supply division of Rackliffe Bros. “High Speed Steel” of special analysis Workmanship Construction Ample chip capacity Size and strength of shank . Uniformity emper Less breakage Long service More holes Less grinding Less cost per hole Over a period of thirty-five years the rigid requirements demanded of every product that would merit Rackliffe approval---have resulted in placing this department of our organization in the very forefront---and keeping 1t nght there. - Designed for all-around heavy duty Sold by RACKLIFFE BROTHERS Hardware—Paint—Sash Doors and Trim—Farm Implements—Builders' Supplies —its RIGHT from RACKLIFFE'S —it always has been —it always will be