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SHITH DUBIOUS 0N BOTH CANDIDATES Thoks Nethr “A1 Nor over .. Will Be Named n. Henry A. Smith who was a candidate for the tage Place. decorated pink and w hom:e color was prettily Miss Me- 0 ride for a time republican Just prior to the primary, has turned to the city after a tour New England made by him purpose of determinir i ment of this section ot toward the two outsta dential possibilities, |trudging over the | 1o [ | marath NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 21, 1928 FLASHES OF LIFE: ROCKEFELLER’S DAUGHTER IN LITTLE COTTAGE| the Assoclated F | Long Beach, N. Y.—As a goiter, | Joic Ray i3 a great runner. After winnind his first marathon, he fur- ther demonstrated his stamina by 18 holes of the | His score wus| h Lido course, w Haven—Why do we run a on? Clarence DeMar, speak- ng in the Calvary Baptist church, answered his own gquestion: “The ason 18 no different than why we | life’s race. For the pure love what we are doing and love of ting the best we can out of it.” [races 1 pleasant for a time. smys Clarence De Mar, six times. winner of the Boston A. A. race, but every. one who runs a Christian race, he |tells 1,200 persons at Calvary Bap- 1‘”* church, will win and what a Baptist church the need of confes- great thrill it will be, sion for those in whom the sense of | guilt weighs heavily. A well dressed | young woman fainted and wus es-| corted quietly to her hotel. West Haven—Parking space pro- | prietors, beginning June 1, will be |compelled to take out a license | which will cost $20 fer a 50 car wace and §15 for each additional Oslo, Norway — Captain Georg: Wilking, who flew over the Polar re- gions in an airplane, believes that submarines, cruising from Spitzbe gen to Alaska, should not be used tor further explorations of the r gion. New Haven—If a “wet president |is elected” it would make the 15th lamendment a mockery, says Carle- lton M. Sherwood, speaking before Boston — When Captain Koehl, | delegates to the Connecticut Chris- Bremen flier, received an American |tian Endeavor Union convention. gion medal from Captain Robe rl‘ 1. Raymond, Jr., American wartime | Hartford—Sudden death of Mrs. and Herbert Hoov: 1t is his belief, founded on servations during the tri) neither Smith nor Hocver nominated by their respec Smith, a veteran of 1 of political activity dent Roosevelt's cor crs when the la Bull Moose tic den or Dawes as t republican convention City, Mo, but w for defeat of his namesak democrats convene at Ho he does not attempt to Jefersonian party fleld. With reference tc nomination, Smith slight hope th consent to run view that Coolidge « be a candid; 1 it would be contrary choosing, in which cas2 a landslide at the convention certain, he believes. ~ In the opinion of the naither Gov. Smith nor Hoover have the strength w they are generally credited. GOLUMBIA CREW T0 ROW IN STEWARDS' CUP RACE V'inal Examinations Not to Interfere With Plans Formulated by Lion Boatmen. New York, May 21.—(—Pert sion has been granted the Columb varsity crew to participate in the Stewards cup race at the American Henley regatta on the Schuylkill at Philadelphia next Saturday. Al- though the Yion 150-pound crew was entered in the Henley two weeks age, it was fearcd that the varsity oaremen would be detained on th campus by final examinations, which began today. In the Stewards’ cup, the one mile, 580.yard Henley event for senior eight-oared varsity and club crews, the Lions are certain to meet Penn- sylvania and the Pennsylvania Athletic club, with the poesibility that the navy may be present. The usual rumors are being he , too, regarding the appearance of the Princeton varsit: The entry of t Stewards' cup would mean a test between the Glendons—Richard J., the son, at Columbia, and Richard A., the father at Annapélis. They oached together at Annapolis for years and then at Columbia. The cld- cr Glendon finally returned to tk Navy in an attempt to regain the prestige midshipman crews had known in the past, Some of the college crews are a Jit doubtful about the Henley b -ause several already have appearcd on the Philadelphia course and all expect to return there July 6-7 for the 2,000.metre sprint which will ide Olympic participation f lozen-odd aspirants, City Items ile his own Coolider 14 be loeal m Navy cight | Miss Allee Johnson of Maple nd Miss Linnea A street spent the week-¢ York city. Permanent ughter has 1 New Drit; nd Mrs. iHarrison stre A miscellar jered Miss Mar Arch street 7 ome of Miss ( SPECIALIZING 1N Home Made Pies Formerly At CROWELL'S DRUG STORY Telephone Your O« Day rs One in Advance to 5799-W 90 WALNUT ST Apartment 15—No Deliveries How Do You Like These Auto Laundry Prices? Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday Open Cars and 2-1"; All others, ¢ Friday, Saturda) 100 Car Let Us Relusterize You Rackliffe’s Auto Laundry ept very large cars ... Sunday—25¢ Additional Daily Capacity. Time Required—Fifteen to Twenty Minutes Every Car Inspected by New Inspection System. rooms | 5" Auxiliary, | tomorrow Y. M " GREATALE GREW | Eli Oarsmen Have Tasy Time in Showing Olympic Form in Derby urday, 1s an ( result of it v vie- v over Cornell and Princeton here | Saturday afternoon aft vmpic pos. ra previous Coluni- between vest combini- o neidered a green it ] or 1o its rivals that it | ¢ and pulled 1 ost. four he character of | but there S excitement Thrlln the autitully function- for it was not until t most at the line that the Yal kis traditional red oarsmen into their nish aved ent the inge- ton, each taking two races. Cornell | did not ficure seriously. The Blue iphed in the junior varsity event purting coming from be- hind in the quarter mile, The al thrill of afternoon was the the 150-pound crew race, r Harvard had pulled out front and led all the way t quarter mile, the Prince- ton lightwei suddenly caught and forged ahead of them to win by half a second. In the freshman race Princeton s in the winner, with Yale second. A huge Cornell cight finished a creditable third. No. 6 in its shell was Bliss B. Clark of New Brifain, who was the 1 man in the entire regatta. Clark is making an excellent showing in this, last w st year at rowi cd chase through reet last night brought Ive fou Broad to a close, Waterbury | who had | purpose of en- A fifth boy got awa the ear in Meriden 1 bef they reached | ord was sent to the about the theft. The | r was first noticed by Super- umerary Muszynski on sroad mandeered a itomobile and gave chase. joined by Foliceman Daniel q Policeman ticed that lowed down 1ed Gold street and shine, which with an- t the curb. to the vor s than ar for the 1 ride. said Britain, police directto fler a long chase canght fonr of then Within Meriden p uths their arrest the stified and the I to th lice w T e turned ov au- PAINTER WANTS DIVORCE May 21 (I"P)—Clifford Earl well known on 210 Classified Ad 1o serve you v Coupes . ... $l'25 . $1.50 r Headlight Reflectors. In aviator, the former that it was their Their second was - afte camps. Ducsseldorf, Germany—Americans nust look to their Olympic laurels an cxhibition meet Hoffmei thlished a discus-throwing rd of 45.38 meters. Tokyo—Miss Kinu Hitomi to compete at Amsterdam, Their first plar who is & New both had escaped from prison helped to shoot down e on the Toul sector, London—Police enemies agreed | Mary Opio, 58, on May 11, results third meeting. [in arrest of William Perkins, who in Switzerland, 'ljved with woman for two years as her husband. Two sons of the dead |woman by a former -marriage * |cause the investigation. was when each the o " Meriden—A long chase In aufo- !mobiles in which shots are fired to change WOMAN SHINS OVER 50 HOURS IN TANK Excels Men's Record by 4 Hours and 10 Minatets Chicago, May 21 (#—What man has done, man can do—with the probability that woman can do it even better. Mre. Myrtle Huddleston of Mat- toon, Ill, was taken from the pool of the Lincoln Park West hotel early today after having been swimming there for G0 hours, 10 minutes, 15 4-5 seconds. The time beats by 17 hours and 50 minutes the best previous endurance record for wo- men, made Saturday by Miss Nyle Austin of San Francisco, Cal. It excels by four hours and 10 minutes the hest previous record of man, held in Germany by Otto Kem- merich. 30 Year Old Mother, { bottom. —_—— when taken from the tank, but the 12 swimming coaches of Chicago athletic associations who acted as officials during the endurance at- tempt estimated that she had lost 20 or more pounds. When she fin- ished the Catalina channel swim she | came out of lighter. the water 1S pounds In Wheel Chatr. Physicians immediately took “the swimmer in charge. She was un- able to draw herself from the water, nor was she able to remain on her feet, A wheel chair was taken to the side of the pool and Mrs. Hud- dleaton wheeled to her room. Only three times during the 50 hours did she take nourishment, and only hot chocolate then. She finish- ed the swim much fatigued. Her hands and feet were shrunken from the long immersion. During the entire time she was in the water a group of officials was present to see that she did not touch cither the sides of the tank nor the Mrs. Huddleston remained constantly in motion, using various strokes. Somewhat to the surprise of many, she did not attempt to rest by floating on her back, complain- ing that it made her dizzy and ill. charge of assault with intent to kill to one of murder against Gus Le- bati. Stanley Lesnick, a ncighbor he shot last Tuesday, died of in- [ juries. real sprinter. In practice she done onds, has | the 100 meters in 12 1.5 see- *w York—Bachelor are! Miss Elizabeth Marbury, | theatrical producer, who doesn't| mind admitting she was born in 1556, doesn’t want to be considered an old maid until she has a chance to “look over that bunch at Hous- | ton mighty carefully.” “If 1 see the man I want,” she adds, “well—" She is a delegate. democrats, Hartford—Police armed with bench warrants are on their wuy to Santa Fe, N. M., to take into cu: tody Margaret T. Watkins and Guy M. Tresslar, wife and brother-i law of Roger W. Watkins, who sought on charges of embezzlemer e pair will be charged with be- ing essories to Watkins. Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. louder, a jazz band or an Jlane motor? As a test, two Jhones, a piccolo, two cornets and | trombone were played up in a lune. Jazz won. 1:.‘ Bridgeport—Still going strong de- o. | Spite their decrease in numbers, 400 old horses stage a parade all of their own. Traffic was stopped to allow the faithful old Dobbins, one ars old and blind, to pass in review while relics they once grew Tarrytown, N. Y.—They have mil- |V daily are bronght out and wheeled lions and mansions, but prefer love 1 a cottage. Mr. and Mrs. David|into line Milton (Abby Rockefeller) and their | baby are removing from a house on | Long Island fo a little brown cot- tage on the estate of her father, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. The cottage was formerly oecupied by employes. Bridgeport—Willlam McAndrew, dismissed by Mayor Thompson as superintendent schools in Chicago when accuscd being a “link with King George outlines importance of th: profession at the 50t ing of the Fairfield ers’ association. of New York—The value of lost, ved or stolen milk bottles in the | big town and vicinity is put at £2,. 00,000 a year by dealers. str Angels Camp, Cal—How far can | frog leap? An amphibian rodeo ! s won with a leap of three and a Lalf feet. Fifty one frogs competed. Waterbury—Rt. Rev. John J. Nilan, bishop of Hartford, dedicates the church of the Immaculate Con- | ception, one of the most’ beautiful New York—The Rev. Dr. Henry churches in New Engiand. Iimerson Fosdick was urging upon his congregation in the Park Avenue | New Haven—Winning marathon wanted to |<now ...and so she told her NE day a house guest from the North exclaimed: ‘Anne, how do you manage to motor and play golf and actually help with the work at home, and keep such gorgeously pretty hands?™ Anne smiled gratefully at so frank a com- pliment, for every Southern woman knows that pretty hands, more than anything else, express true Southern charm and breeding. Then she explained . . . particles in the Rinse han soaps are mild a times a day. How Southern women keep their You want to hands so charming Anne's hands were not different from those of other Southern women. For in the South, homeland of beautiful women, lovely hands are accounted the most fascinating of all of women's charms. And this is how they keep them: Many, many times each daya Southern girl will rinse her hands in mild pure cleansing suds that keep the skin in fine condition. At night no treatments, no imposing array of fancy soaps and medications. Just careful washing. That is all. How simple! And how sensible. To re- move all dire before it works into the pores ~—the dust you can see, and the fine gritty is Octagon Toi of delicate hand: generous in all Order Octagon white soap. Please Rear Franklin Square Filling Station FREE—A trial cake with our compliments B who drew international tame when | “Big Bill' | brings arrest of four boys, all un- der 16. The boys, whose homes are |in Waterbury, are held for stealing |wutomoites. | Northampton, Mass., Mrs. Calvin Coolidge finds mother's condition | “unchanged” as she renews visits to side of aged patient at Dickinson hiospital after lapse of several weeks. | Cohasset, Mass.—Three men ar- I'rested for murder of Ziancomo Ser- |rario, whose body was found in i woods last Tuesday. Transcontinental Air | Line to Start Shortly San Francisco, May 21 UP—The Examiner today quoted Willlam B. sStout, head of the airplane division of the Ford Motor Company, who is | stopping here, as saying a transcon. tinental air line having “the backing of the Ford interesta probably would be put into operation this summer. The project was expected by Stout [to be in the experimental stage for about a year, during which planes would be operateM across the eoun- try about once a week. Mr. Btout id he expected that improved cquipment would permit 24 hour rvice from the Atlantic to the il‘nrmc a year hence, air that sift into the skin invisibly, making the skin coarse and rough. ds eight times a day ‘Won't you try this simple, easy way to make your hands as charming as they ought to be? Rinse eight times a dey. As often as you happen near the bathroom. As often as you know you should. And now—be areful of your soap. Few nd pure enough to use eight use 2 toilet soap that's mild and white, of course. Best of all the rinsing soaps, say the lovely girls of the Southland, let Soap, whose pure mild lather is best for tending the exquisite skin Some white soaps form a “'skin” when you are half way through the cake. Other soaps get soft and mushy. But Octagon Toilet Soap is the same all the way through, waters, with its clean, abun- dant lather, yet firm to the end of the cake. And Octagon Toilet Soap is full measure —all solid s0ap. An extra week in every cake. Toilet Soap. Try a cake to- day. For normal, pretty hands—this pure AT YOUR DEALER'S—NEVER MORL THAN 10c Colgate & Co., Jerscy City, N.J.. Dept. E send me FREE 1 trial cske of Octagon Toilet Soap. Sate Mrs. Huddleston, a 30 year old mother, is no novice to the water. She formerly held the world's en- durance swimming record for wo- | men. She was the only woman 10 finish the Catalina cNannel race. The swimmer's son was not pres- ent when officials lifted her from the water, this being the first time he has been absent from the finish of any of his mother's record breaking attempts. | Mra. Huddleston, who weighed 240 pounds, was not put on the scales | U Mrs. Huddleston's reward for rec- ord breaking was §5,000 offered by Bannerman Hotels, In. One thou- sand dollars offered for breaking the women's record, with $1,600 addi- the men’s mark. Coast Guardsmen Held For N. Y. Grand Jury| Niagara, Falls, N. Y | day, June 24 at 10:30 a. m. this tional for every hour she excceded | Bridgeport church. The present pa: | tor, Rev. | formerly where he built St. Patrick's church a charged with second degree assault in connection with the shooting of Jacob D. Hanson, Elks lodge secre- tary on Lewiston Hill, May 6, waived examination and were held for the grand jury when they were arraign- ed today before a justice of the peace at Lewiston. They were taken to Lockport , for arraignment in county court “here bail will be fixed later in the day, REV, JORN J.EANE CHOSEN AS SPEAKER Will Officiate at Bridgeport Church Rededication Rev. John J. Keane, assistant pastor of St. Joseph’e church, will be the preacher at the rededication cercmonies of St. Mary's church, Bridgeport next Sunday. The church | was destroyed by fire last October, and it has been rebuilt, and will be redegicated by Rt Rev. John J. Nilan, bishop of Hartford, on Sun- Rev, Matthew J. Traynor of St. Mary's city was formerly pastor of the Wilson wa Farmington, M. Ernest located in nd rectory Father Keane also will conduct & May 21 (P)|retreat for the student and graduate Chris Dew, |nurses of §t. Raphacl's hospital in ates coast guardsmen | New Haven from May | 28 to 31. The shelves of your A & P store are full end —you will have the best at a liberal buy all your foods at the A & B‘!tter Silverblf)om Ham Shoulders KELLOGG'S or POST TOASTIES Corn Flakes Double tipped matches in full count boxes! Matches Corned beef hash ready to brown and ser Prudence Hash Keep your schoolgirl complexion! Palmolive Soap ENCORE, the Queen of Salad Dressings! Mayonnaise =35 mozjn 8¢ Lueky Strike, Camel, Chesterfield, Cigarettes *“*“ oohc OF 10 PKGS Hires’ Root Beer Extract Gulden’s Mustard Sliced Beef 6 03 30c Dried Beef Deviled Hom Grape Juice qt 43c Blue Peter Sardines Moxie Haffenreffer Stout Haffenreffer Sparkling 4 bots 25¢ Dill Pickles qt jar Sour or Sour Mised Pickles [ Sweet or Sweet Mived Pickles % Wazx Paper 3 pkgs Market Baskets each bot 22¢ Jar 13c 35 o3 20c Ib 49¢ can 20c pt 23c 3 cans 29c bottle 18¢c 4 bots 25¢ Golden Bantam Heins Catsup 35¢ Doughnuts 25¢ Rajah Sandwich 12¢ Special Kirkman Sale 5 Cakes Kirkman’s Borax Soap 1 Pkg. Kirkman’s Soap Powder 3-1 Fireside Jumbles Ketchup A & P Blue Label Ketchup Octagon Toilet Soap Octagon White Soap Octagon Soap Powder 17¢ Heinz Tomato Soup '-’?C Heins Baked Beans Sauce can 13c Country Club Soda UGGESTIONS y stocked with the finest of imported and domestic picnic foods. Stock the pantry shelves of your camp or cottage this week- saving if you N Ib. 4 9 - 27 - 17 Wy, 427 622 N 2’ 9 : . aflgz 19; s1.19 Fine Foods for Your Picnics Queen Olives lge 29c small 17¢ Stuffed Olives 7% ox 29c é os 25¢ Corn can 17¢ b 21e Ige bot 18: Ige bot 25¢ cake 3¢ cake 3c pkg 7e Ige bot 37¢ ean 10e % dos 10c Jjar 25¢ Al Flavors Spread - Grandmother’s you fresh in sanitary wrappers Bread The home-baked flavor of this fine loaf of bread | makes all sandwich fillings taste better. It’s ! made of the finest materials and delivered to » LARGE LOAF