New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 22, 1928, Page 10

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s § [ REBE'VES I]EEREE ‘W. Hartford - From Corbins' | burg - No, Plains road is FROMTWO SCHOOLS Carles Backnam Gefs A. B. From Stanford and Also Harvard Cambridge, Mass. June 21 (UP) —Recelving an A. B. degree from two major universities within a week was the unique experience of Charles Clark Buckman, who gradu- ated from Harvard yesterday. Bucknam, who prepared for col- icge at Mitchell Military school in Tillerica, Mass, and Phillips-An- dover Academy, was awarded a de- grec Monday at Stanford University, California Bucknam entered 25 and received a scholarship at the end of his sophomore vear. decided to pursue his studies in the west and entered the junior class at | Stanford the next fall. He com pleted his degree requirements at o western institution the follow- | ng vear school Tast fall he returned te Harvard. having completed the amount of study required te enter the senior He graduated with his class yosterday, receiving the A. B. de- gree, completing three Cambridge and only one year at Palo Alto for a similar degree He will enter the School of Busi- ness Administration at class next fall. i i d | shovel grading under Road Conditions in 8 State of Connecticut Yoad the s conditions and detoues in| of Connecticut made nec- by highway construction, re- pairs and oiling announced by the | State Highway Department as of June 20, are as follows: Route No. Norwalk — Armory Hill, section of the Boston Post Road, concrete | finished. Shoulder work only, no de- lay to traffic. Milford — Boston Post from Devon Center to W street, concrete road Fhoulders under construction. delay to traffic. Westport — Compo Hill section | of the Boston Post Road. Construc- | tion work started. East bound traf- | fic detou around block, west bound traffic goes through job. Branford R. R. underpass is under construction by the N. Y., N, H. & H. k. R. company. No de-| to traific essary Road 1ington completed. No Harvard in| way traffic with telephone control. He | by enrolling in the summer | ished. years at| Harvard | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1928, under Corner to Hartford City line is be- | construction. No delay to traffic. ing oiled. o Route No. 154 5 Hanite WNo. {14 Washington - . Woodbury road, No. Brantord and No. Haven. | eam shovel grading at two places. Middletown - New Haven road. |gnort delavs probable Concrete road is under construc- ‘ e tion. Traffic controlled hy traffic Baute No. 166 men. Route No. 18 | Hamden - Dixwell avenue. Con- | crete road completed, shoulders un- | der construction. No delay to traffic. | Cheshire - Hamden road is being | oiled for five miles. | Route No. 120 and 147 Woodbridge - Amity road. con- crete road is under construction. | Traffic controlled by traffic men. | Route No. 121 Salisbury, Canaan - road is under construction. ! tours. Salisbury No de- Route No. 122 | Newtown - Bridgeport road, eon- crete construction under way. One- Route 'No. 123 oot of Bunker Hill to Cornwall Bridge, resurfacing shoulders and guard rail not finish- od. Traffic open at all times. Canton, Collinsville - Nepaug road | is under construction. Detour sstab- | Traffic should proceed with caution. Cornwall - West Cornwall road is | being oiled for three miles . New Hartford - Nepaug being oiled for three miles. Route No. 126 | complete. | road {s j overpass, grade crossing elimination, | concrete construction under way, | but traffic us old highway | Route No. 127 | Kent - Macedonia road steam way, no de- | tours. | Route No. 128 Danbury - New Milford road. three shovels grading Short delays probable. | Litchfield - Bantam road is under | construction. One-way traffic main | tained. Route No. 129 construction under line, macadam way. Traffic recommended to take route via® Bulls Bridge. 1y Route No. 130 Woodbury - Watertown road. up- town bridge is under construction. '; to So. Canaan is under construction. ', “Traffic open at all times. Short de- | tour around one bridge, i Route No. 1 | Hartland Hollow bridge is under construction, short —detour around bridge. Old Lyme, Last Lyme and Water- | ford road is under construction for | five miles. One-way traffic for | about two miles in the town of Hast | Lyme. Through traffic advised to take route No. 533 from Old Lyme | to Jordan's Village. Route No. 3 Waterbury — Middlebury road is under construction, short detours. | Materbury — Milldale road, Southington Mountain is under con- struction. One-way traffic main- tained. T should take road through Ch Ridgefield - Danbury road, con- crete construction under way. fic with telephone control. Southington - Plainville road is hein goiled for six miles, Route No. 4 salisbury - Great Barrington road 15 under construction. No detours. | Sharon - Lakeville road is under | construction, No detour Route No. U, S 5 Wallingford - No. Colony strert Conerete pavement being laid. One- way traffic for about one mile. Meriden - North Colony streot is under construction. No delay to traffic. Route No. U. 8. 6 rooklyn - Daniclson road in the t of Killingly and Brooklyn un- construction. Detour posted Triffic flagmen. olumbi - Hartford regulated by is imder t section of or way zulated by tele phone. Willimantic to Hartford traf- fic should use road through South Coventry So. Britain Underp: = « climination. B ; jon nnder way No. 8 oute No detours nece n to troffic. 109 r construction Route No. road is M fie Phocnixville ler construetion, detour posed from enville to Ashford. This road 1 impassable to traffic. Coventry, Coventry - Mansficld Depot road is closed, eut traffic toventry Route No. 111 It road lay to No. 112 Route No. for five oute No, der construction. Ope One- | Hartland - Riverton road is being oiled for two miles. | construction. Route No. 13t |erete road completed Danbury - Norwalk road. Wilton [controlled by is being resu times. Work completed with the ex- [ Whom Shaver obtained the worth- ception of in highway. |pils. No detours. One feels : Darien - Hoyt street, bituminous West Virginian or a Kentuckian or | fi Gaylordsville to New York state | oiled Crystal 1.2 rgad. towns of Rockville and Ellington are construction. Somewhat rough. under No detours. 0 S o ey cratic Party being oiled beginning at Ellipgton Slie running south. o5 ™ s Route No. 179 (Copyzignt, I?;\";?\EA gl il Preston, the road - from Poque-| g, cpington. June 22—Politician | fanuck to Brewsters' Neck is under |, ;g “naturalist, Chairman Clem "‘gl‘.“"l""“"’"- very rough, no de-|ghavar of the democratic national s e el committee is’an unusual combina- Bethel - Tedding road, steam = yqgu geherman, hunter and apostle shovel grading under way. No de- tours. Redding - Georgetown road is un- der construction. No detours, Route No. 186 No. Haven - State str con- Shoulders un- delay to traf- der construction. No fic. Route No. 325 Prospect - Cheshire road, bound macadam is under construc- tion. Short detours in two spots. Rou 0. 338 0Old Saybrook - Point Road is be- ng oiled for four miles. No Route Numbers Branford Pine Orchard Concrete road completed. traffic men. - Killingworth road tion. No dclay. Westbrook, Clinton - road. Traffic Chesteh under constru Clinton - Cornwall Plains to West Cornwall ced. Passable at all shoulders and guard ad under construction. Traffic losed off during time asphalt is he- ng applied. otherwise open to traf- Iiaston - Monroe road s under construction, no delay to traffic. Fairfield - Stratfield, Benson, Branson and Greenfield roads being Mansfield Center - Terryville road s under construction, open to traf- One-way traffic across femporary |po bridge. Middlefield - Durham road, gra- Route No. 132 ding on Cherry Hill roud Cornwall Hollow road, Cornwall|" Nowvington » Hartford avenue is heing oiled for one mile. New Fairfield - Lalls s being oiled. Preston, Hallville - Pond road Poquetanuck road is being oiled. Redding - Lonetown road is being loiled for 3% miles. Sharon - Millerton road is under hort detour. Huntsville So. Canaan - road New Milford - Kent road is heing | ojoged. Detour through Falls Village. oiled for three miles. I Route No. 1 No. Branford - Guilford road fs| under construction. Some delay to| traftic. [ sast Haven - Foxon road is being | oiled for two mile: s Route No. 136 New Tairfield - Sherman steam shovel grading and macac construction under way. Short | lays probable. | Route No. 141 Rridge over Little River on the west is warned to be careful in ap- proaching this bridge, which is lo- cated at the foot of a steep grade. | road is being oiled for one mile. is umder construction. - Baltic - No. Franklin trid Sprague Sterling - Sterling Hill road is be- ng oiled. Trumbull - White Plains road {s | being oiled. Westport - Riverside avenue. Con- fic. Wolcott, Waterbury - Woodtick road is under construction. No dt-i : | tours. Scotland - Canterbury road is un-| *\Voodbridze + Racebrook road {der construction. While the old], o™ nal constrnction, no de- bridge is in use, traffic from the lay to traffic. Route No, 142 Woodstock - Putnam road is be. | Quick, safe, sure relief from ing oiled for one mile. ":l‘:o‘l'l‘:n::’::thnm |Route No. 141 | sores Birooklyn - Wauregan road is be- | JIM ing oiled for three miles . P Bypan Route No. 150 zm- aints pone Lyme and kast Haddam - Ham- | Sage-Allen & INC., HARTFORD New Britain Phone—3005 Swogger Sports Frocks Dresses—All Features Sale of | Dresses $19:50 £29.50 and More Formerly Ihe sort of frocks (beauti- tatlored and made of fin- est guality silks) that look well fror ful 2 till night. Also there are some smart afternoon and street frocks zeorgettes and silk crepes in d dark Dis- tinguished by their smart sim- plicity of line and trimming details, colors. A range cludes of models that in- women, misses and large women. for Dress Shop—Second Floor and Dainty Afterpoon i d For Friday in a water- | THE BOSS THAT NOBODY HNOWS successful as in his role of har- monizer for his party. He knows the devious ways of politics and he knows the trees, Iplants, animale and mountains of | West Virginia perhaps equally well. |On his farm near Fairmont he has scores of fox hounds pedigreed cattle and try unusual pout On a clear night he is likely to he with those hounds in the hills 1t he likes anything betfer it's fish- {ing and he is said to he the bhest fiy fisherman in the state. They say he |can cast over rocks and under | branches to scare a terrapin off a |rock 80 feet away. Possibly there is some connection | betreen Shaver's love of the out is | doors and the fact that he fs known | I results count, he las an unusgally | He expraine an politician. once that his chief in- | Deep River road is under construc- erest in politics was the election of tion for two and one-half miles. {go0d men to office. It seems likely that no cleancr man ever ran for the presidency than John W, Davis, for less democratic nomination in 1 One feels that Shaver looks lik 24 a Tennessean out to look. His hair |is white and vet he has the glow of | vouth. He 18 thin rather than fat: I his eyes are shrewd and serious. | He is 61 years old. He is energetic, }huf never noisy; he works quietly {and thus accomplishes much more | |than he is commonly supposed to | accomplish. ~ For a man hardly known fo the rank and file of his party. it is surprising to discover |the warmth of the affection of his |friends. He is a kind and very | human person. Although Shaver is now known as the chairman under whom the party | paid its debts and as the man who | successfully put over the Jackson | Day dinner when no one thought it [could he done without havoe, and | virtually led the party out of chaos, | lthe “apparenit common supposition | that Davis picked an inexperienced man for reasons of friendship as his 1924 campaign manager is far from the truth, Drifted Into Politics After he had made moncy at law nd at trading in coal lands and {Clem Shaver I Ace of Demo: of the outdoor life, he has been as along with | d established his splendid estate, | quiet way he has of getting things |only a miracle could make it vie- done. Successively he was chairman | torious, but no campaign was ever og his county democratic committee, | conducted on a higher plane. The chairman of the state committee, | Tammany leaders had demanded and democratic fleor leader in the |that Davis name ene ef their men West Virginia legislature. He man- |to manage his campaign, but Davis aged successful senatorial and gu- | wanted a man he knew he could bernatorial campaigns, bossed con- | trust. He chose Shaver because he ventions, built up organizations and | knew that he would then be able to ategies sleep mights without worrying as to what his campaign manager was up Shaver began to. And also because he knew that s Shaver could do as well with the sador to Eng- | campaign as anyone else, hecame adept at political | and maneuvers. | Way back in 1915, I te promote Davis Davis was then amb; nd. He took up the idea with| Badly licked. with a heavy deficit. Ned Smith, editor of the liairmont Shaver realized that the party or- Times. After that , the editorial ization had to be kept alive and { that the responsibility was as much his as anyone's to keep the factions masthead of the Times every d urged Davis for president and ver was working for the nomina- | from ruining it in their strife. It tion of Davis in 1920, Some of was his complete impartiality and | Shaver's friends say he knew Davis | fairness, exercised solely with re- couldn’t be nominated then, but gard to the best interests and high- that he had his eyes on 1924 and s of democracy, that en- meanwhile wanted to get Davis he- him to take the party to Houston facing something else than general massacre, ay, this writer doesn't know a nywhere who is more en- thusiastic over the prospects of his party than Clem Shaver. {fore the nation. Before the 1920 convention was over Davis had been |a | widely discussed as a compromise candidate and had obtained enough delegates to put him ahead of the favorite son class, The year 1924 found advertised, thanks largely fo Refore the convention as he moved quictly around Asks to ]i(TArrcsted as Turderer of Brother | Davis well <ha smbled king delegates, when and if it seemed | New Haven, June (UP) — A certain their favorite sons couldn't /Mmeck little man describing himself be nominated, to swing to Davis, @S Andrew Honoman., 64, of New- He made no enemies and made ton. Mass., offered himself to police | am the mur- saying, “Arrest me. I derer of my brother.” Monoman told hi many friends. Perhaps Shaver proved himself a brilliant strategist at that convention and perhaps not. story. He had certainly did. 'lived at Branford, a suburb. years| He sat through the heat of battle #g0. When his hrother lay stricken | for 100 balloots and then seized the With tuberculosis 36 years ago he | police, celestial | demanding he psvebological moment to his neglected to get proper medical as sistance. ately, put is Picked Shaver i he fold d an impossible cam- veices had lheen paign and must have realized that atone for the crime. | Aw ForéeT 11! ) | LET's GET SOME | | ¥ : NECCO CHOC w PEPPS | “ 4 You can’t eat scenery, says Skippy's little pal. But Necco Choc Pepps—m-m-m- boy! Tangy mint-flavored wis known as a man of parts and creams—dipped in rich, fted naturally into polities. He pure chocolate. Eight big | just naturally rose hecause people | pieces in a nickel box! | trusted him and hecause of that | A Smart. Collection SUMMER HAT The fashions include the new soft fluttering skirts, the flattering cape collars, the most becoming streamer bows, and the snug hip lines that make the miss look slender, Every dress is new and lovely, offering the newest co]oi‘ings and ma- terials, These values must be seen to be appreciated. These dresses are fashioned, designed and proportioned for women who know smart clothes. DRESS DEPARTMENT TLET M1Lfil’fih3xj§¢T 177 MAIN STREE? of They are of the finer quality— A\ Rarely Seen at This Price— Snowyme CLOTHES with far less work Amazing new “beads” of soap get clothes whiter « o « banish washboards! EW kind of soap! Gives suds in a flash. Dissolves instantly. Saves rubbing . . . scrubbing...at least one rinsing. Gets clothes whiter «..in less time ... with much less work. Super Suds is actually soap in tiny, thin-walled "beads” . . . the result of a revolutionary manufacturing dis- covery. No other soap is like it. No other soap can give you such astonishing results. Ticannot harm the daintiest fabric . . . washes lingerie with safety. And for the heavy work on washday, it is absolutely without a rival. Simply in justice to yourself we urge you to try this wonderful new soap at once. Put it on your grocery list today! OCTAGON — Super Suds - The BIGGEST box ofsoap on the market s | Of 238 MAIN ST. Clearance Sale of Spring Coats We have marked down our entire stock of Spring Coats and for Saturday have grouped them into 4 groups. COATS $1000 Values to $25.00 i COATS $18.00 Values to $45.00 COATS $22.50 Values to $52.50 COATS $0Q.75 Values to $75.00 Included are Dress and Sport models—fur trimmed and plain—sizes for Misses, Women and Stouts. The styles are the season’s newest — the materials are Kasha, Broadcloth, Imported and Domestic Tweeds, Charmene, Velvets, Satin and Canton Crepe. EXTRA SPECIAL CLOSING OUT ENTIRE STOCK OF Spring and Summer HATS $1.88 Were formerly up to $5.00. Included are Dress and Sport Hats—Straws, Felts, Hemps, Milan, Hair and Combinations.

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